Anaesthetics, Pain Medicine and Intensive Care, Imperial College London
Doi
Abstract
Stroke in general but especially in the postoperative period is a serious clinical
problem that warrants new therapeutic approaches. Here neuroprotective
strategies and especially preconditioning have recently emerged as promising.
Preconditioning was originally demonstrated in the heart but was subsequently
also found in other organs. Classically it describes a phenomenon where short
periods of ischaemia render tissues less vulnerable to major infarcts. In addition to
ischaemia neuronal preconditioning can be achieved pharmacologically as well as
through inhalational anaesthetics or drugs that open ATP-sensitive K+(KATP)
channels. However, the mechanisms through which anaesthetics produce
protection remain elusive and the use of K+ channel openers is hampered by their
inability to cross the blood-brain-barrier.
This study was conducted to investigate the effects of inhalational anaesthetics on
KATP
channels and to explore whether their neuronal preconditioning properties
were dependent on KATP channel opening. First, in whole-cell and excised patchclamp
experiments the effects of inhalational anaesthetics on recombinant wild
type neuronal (Kir6.2/SUR1) KATP and related as well as modified channels were
evaluated. Secondly, the KATP channel dependence of anaesthetic preconditioning
was tested in neuronal-glial co-cultures.
Recombinant KATP channels were activated by xenon, but inhibited by
halogenated volatiles. Moreover, it was shown that xenon acted directly on the
Kir6.2 pore-forming subunit, reduced the ability of ATP to inhibit the channel and
had no effect on the ATP-regulated Kir1.1 channel. Functionally both sevoflurane
and xenon preconditioned neurons at clinically used concentrations but only the
effect of xenon was dependent on KATP channel activation.
Thus this study established xenon as a novel KATP channel opener. It interacts
with the pore-forming Kir6.2 rather than the regulatory sulphonylurea receptor
subunit and disinhibits the channel from the blocking actions of ATP. As a
consequence xenon but not sevoflurane is able to precondition neurons in a KATP
channel-dependent manner