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Anesthetic-like Interaction of the Sleep-inducing Lipid Oleamide with Voltage-gated Sodium Channels in Mammalian Brain
- Source :
- Anesthesiology. 94:120-128
- Publication Year :
- 2001
- Publisher :
- Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2001.
-
Abstract
- Background cis-9,10-Octadecenoamide (cOA) accumulates in cerebrospinal fluid during sleep deprivation and induces sleep in animals, but its cellular actions are poorly characterized. In earlier studies, like a variety of anesthetics, cOA modulated gamma-aminobutyric acidA receptors and inhibited transmitter release/burst firing in cultured neurones or synaptoneurosomes. Methods Here, radioligand binding ([3H]batrachotoxinin A 20-alpha-benzoate and mouse central nervous system synaptoneurosomes) and voltage clamp (whole cell recording from cultured NIE115 murine neuroblastoma) confirmed an interaction with neuronal voltage-gated sodium channels (VGSC). Results cOA stereoselectively inhibited specific binding of toxin to VGSC (inhibitor concentration that displaces 50% of specifically bound radioligand, 39.5 microm). cOA increased (4x) the Kd of toxin binding without affecting its binding maximum. Rate of dissociation of radioligand was increased without altering association kinetics, suggesting an allosteric effect (indirect competition at site 2 on VGSC). cOA blocked tetrodotoxin-sensitive sodium currents (maximal effect and affinity were significantly greater at depolarized potentials; P < 0.01). Between 3.2 and 64 microm, the block was concentration-dependent and saturable, but cOA did not alter the V50 for activation curves or the measured reversal potential (P > 0.05). Inactivation curves were significantly shifted in the hyperpolarizing direction by cOA (maximum, -15.4 +/- 0.9 mV at 32 microm). cOA (10 microm) slowed recovery from inactivation, with tau increasing from 3.7 +/- 0.4 ms to 6.4 +/- 0.5 ms (P < 0.001). cOA did not produce frequency-dependent facilitation of block (up to 10 Hz). Conclusions These effects (and the capacity of oleamide to modulate gamma-aminobutyric acidA receptors in earlier studies) are strikingly similar to those of a variety of anesthetics. Oleamide may represent an endogenous ligand for depressant drug sites in mammalian brain.
- Subjects :
- Male
medicine.medical_specialty
Patch-Clamp Techniques
Oleamide
Voltage clamp
Oleic Acids
Sodium Channels
Mice
Neuroblastoma
chemistry.chemical_compound
Receptors, GABA
Internal medicine
Radioligand
Animals
Hypnotics and Sedatives
Medicine
Patch clamp
Batrachotoxins
Receptor
Cells, Cultured
business.industry
Sodium channel
Brain
Electrophysiology
Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine
Endocrinology
chemistry
Anesthetic
Biophysics
business
medicine.drug
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 00033022
- Volume :
- 94
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Anesthesiology
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....d4a4ee8898d23f1289be39b352080fed