4.4 Article

Isoflurane inhibits a Kir4. 1/5 .1-like conductance in neonatal rat brainstem astrocytes and recombinant Kir4.1/5.1 channels in a heterologous expression system

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY
Volume 124, Issue 3, Pages 740-749

Publisher

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/jn.00358.2020

Keywords

anesthesia; chemoreception; retrotrapezoid nucleus

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [HL104101, HL137094, NS099887, NS075062]
  2. Dravet Syndrome Foundation [AG180243]
  3. American Epilepsy Society
  4. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81202607]
  5. China Scholarship Council [201606240204]

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All inhalation anesthetics used clinically including isoflurane can suppress breathing; since this unwanted side effect can persist during the postoperative period and complicate patient recovery, there is a need to better understand how isoflurane affects cellular and molecular elements of respiratory control. Considering that astrocytes in a brainstem region known as the retrotrapezoid nucleus (RTN) contribute to the regulation of breathing in response to changes in CO2/H+ (i.e., function as respiratory chemoreceptors), and astrocytes in other brain regions are highly sensitive to isoflurane, we wanted to determine whether and how RTN astrocytes respond to isoflurane. We found that RTN astrocytes in slices from neonatal rat pups (7-12 days postnatal) respond to clinically relevant levels of isoflurane by inhibition of a CO2/H+ -sensitive Kir4.1/5.1-like conductance [50% effective concentration (EC50) = 0.8 mM or similar to 1.7%]. We went on to confirm that similar levels of isoflurane (EC50 = 0.53 mM or 1.1%) inhibit recombinant Kir4.1/5.1 channels but not homomeric Kir4.1 channels expressed in HEK293 cells. We also found that exposure to CO2/H+ occluded subsequent effects of isoflurane on both native and recombinant Kir4.1/5.1 currents. These results identify Kir4.1/5.1 channels in astrocytes as novel targets of isoflurane. These results suggest astrocyte Kir4.1/5.1 channels contribute to certain aspects of general anesthesia including altered respiratory control. NEW & NOTEWORTHY An unwanted side effect of isoflurane anesthesia is suppression of breathing. Despite this clinical significance, effects of isoflurane on cellular and molecular elements of respiratory control are not well understood. Here, we show that isoflurane inhibits heteromeric Kir4.1/5.1 channels in a mammalian expression system and a Kir4.1/5.1-like conductance in astrocytes in a brainstem respiratory center. These results identify astrocyte Kir4.1/5.1 channels as novel targets of isoflurane and potential substrates for altered respiratory control during isoflurane anesthesia.

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