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Fast-spiking Interneurons Contribute to Propofol-induced Facilitation of Firing Synchrony in Pyramidal Neurons of the Rat Insular Cortex

Journal

ANESTHESIOLOGY
Volume 134, Issue 2, Pages 270-282

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1097/ALN.0000000000003571

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health (Bethesda, Maryland) [T32GM120011, R01-DK097075, R01-HL098294, POI-HL114457, R01-DK082509, R01-HL109233, R01-DK109574, R01-HL119837, R01-HL133900]
  2. American Thoracic Society (New York, New York)
  3. American Heart Association (Dallas, Texas) Career Development Award [19CDA34660279]
  4. American Lung Association (Chicago, Illinois) Catalyst Award [CA-622265]
  5. Center for Clinical and Translational Sciences, McGovern Medical School (Houston,Texas) Pilot Award [1UL1TR003167-01]
  6. Parker B. Francis Fellowship (Kansas City, Missouri)

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The study demonstrates that propofol enhances inhibitory inputs from fast-spiking neurons to promote firing synchrony among pyramidal neurons, potentially contributing to propofol-induced loss of consciousness.
Background: The general anesthetic propofol induces frontal alpha rhythm in the cerebral cortex at a dose sufficient to induce loss of consciousness. The authors hypothesized that propofol-induced facilitation of unitary inhibitory postsynaptic currents would result in firing synchrony among postsynaptic pyramidal neurons that receive inhibition from the same presynaptic inhibitory fast-spiking neurons. Methods: Multiple whole cell patch clamp recordings were performed from one fast-spiking neuron and two or three pyramidal neurons with at least two inhibitory connections in rat insular cortical slices. The authors examined how inhibitory inputs from a presynaptic fast-spiking neuron modulate the timing of spontaneous repetitive spike firing among pyramidal neurons before and during 10 mu M propofol application. Results: Responding to activation of a fast-spiking neuron with 150-ms intervals, pyramidal cell pairs that received common inhibitory inputs from the presynaptic fast-spiking neuron showed propofol-dependent decreases in average distance from the line of identity, which evaluates the coefficient of variation in spike timing among pyramidal neurons: average distance from the line of identity just after the first activation of fast-spiking neuron was 29.2 +/- 24.1 (mean +/- SD, absolute value) in control and 19.7 +/- 19.2 during propofol application (P < 0.001). Propofol did not change average distance from the line of identity without activating fast-spiking neurons and in pyramidal neuron pairs without common inhibitory inputs from presynaptic fast-spiking neurons. The synchronization index, which reflects the degree of spike synchronization among pyramidal neurons, was increased by propofol from 1.4 +/- 0.5 to 2.3 +/- 1.5 (absolute value, P = 0.004) and from 1.5 +/- 0.5 to 2.2 +/- 1.0 (P = 0.030) when a presynaptic fast-spiking neuron was activated at 6.7 and 10 Hz, respectively, but not at 1, 4, and 13.3 Hz. Conclusions: These results suggest that propofol facilitates pyramidal neuron firing synchrony by enhancing inhibitory inputs from fast-spiking neurons. This synchrony of pyramidal neurons may contribute to the alpha rhythm associated with propofol-induced loss of consciousness.

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