Brosnan RJ, Pham TL. Does anesthetic additivity imply a similar molecular mechanism of anesthetic action at N-methyl-D-aspartate receptors?
Anesth Analg 2011;
112:568-73. [PMID:
21233494 DOI:
10.1213/ane.0b013e3182080599]
[Citation(s) in RCA: 7] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.5] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/08/2023]
Abstract
BACKGROUND
Isoflurane and carbon dioxide (CO(2)) negatively modulate N-methyl-d-aspartate (NMDA) receptors, but via different mechanisms. Isoflurane is a competitive antagonist at the NMDA receptor glycine binding site, whereas CO(2) inhibits NMDA receptor current through extracellular acidification. Isoflurane and CO(2) exhibit additive minimum alveolar concentration effects in rats, but we hypothesized that they would not additively inhibit NMDA receptor currents in vitro because they act at different molecular sites.
METHODS
NMDA receptors were expressed in frog oocytes and studied using 2-electrode voltage clamp techniques. A glycine concentration response for NMDA was measured in the presence and absence of CO(2). Concentration-response curves for isoflurane, H(+), CO(2), and ketamine as a function of NMDA inhibition were measured, and a Hill equation was used to calculate the EC(50) for each compound.
RESULTS
Binary drug combinations containing ½ EC(50) were additive if NMDA current inhibition was not statistically different from 50%. The ½ EC(50) binary drug combinations decreased the percentage baseline NMDA receptor current as follows (mean ± SD, n = 5 to 6 oocytes each): CO(2)+ H(+) (51% ± 5%), CO(2 )+ isoflurane (54% ± 5%), H(+) + isoflurane (51% ± 3%), CO(2)+ ketamine (67% ± 8%), and H(+) + ketamine (64% ± 2%).
CONCLUSIONS
In contrast to our hypothesis, NMDA receptor inhibition by CO(2) and isoflurane is additive. Possibly, CO(2) acidification modulates a pH-sensitive loop on the NMDA receptor that in turn alters glycine binding affinity on the GluN1 subunit. However, ketamine plus either CO(2) or H(+) synergistically inhibits NMDA receptor currents. Drugs acting via different mechanisms can thus exhibit additive or synergistic receptor effects. Additivity may not robustly indicate commonality between molecular anesthetic mechanisms.
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