Behavioral effects of volatile anesthetics in Caenorhabditis elegans

被引:56
作者
Crowder, CM
Shebester, LD
Schedl, T
机构
[1] WASHINGTON UNIV,SCH MED,DEPT MOL BIOL PHARMACOL,ST LOUIS,MO 63110
[2] WASHINGTON UNIV,SCH MED,DEPT GENET,ST LOUIS,MO 63110
关键词
anesthetics; volatile; halothane; behavior; genetics; behavioral; Caenorhabditis elegans; drug mechanisms; theories of anesthesia; volatile anesthetics;
D O I
10.1097/00000542-199610000-00027
中图分类号
R614 [麻醉学];
学科分类号
100217 ;
摘要
Background: The nematode Caenorbabditis elegans offers many advantages as a model organism for studying volatile anesthetic action It has a simple, web-understood nervous system; it allows the researcher to do forward genetics; and its genome will soon be completely sequenced. C. elegans is immobilized by volatile anesthetics only at high concentrations and with an unusually slow time course. Here other behavioral dysfunctions are considered as anesthetic endpoints in C. elegans. Methods: The potency of halothane for disrupting eight different behaviors was determined by logistic regression of concentration and response data. Other volatile anesthetics were also tested for some behaviors. Established protocols were used for behavioral endpoints that, except for pharyngeal pumping, were set as complete disruption of the behavior. Time courses were measured for rapid behaviors. Recovery from exposure to 1 or 4 vol% halothane was determined for mating, chemotaxis, and gross movement. All experiments were performed at 20 to 22 degrees C. Results: The median effective concentration values for halothane inhibition of mating (0.30 vol% - 0.21 mM), chemotaxis (0.34 vol% - 0.24 mM), and coordinated movement (0.32 vol% - 0.23 mM) were similar to the human minimum alveolar concentration (MAC; 0.21 mM). in contrast, halothane produced immobility with a median effective concentration of 3.65 vol% (2.6 mM). Other behaviors had intermediate sensitivities. Halothane's effects reached steady-state in 10 min for all behaviors tested except immobility, which required 2 h. Recovery was complete after exposure to 1 vol% halothane but was significantly reduced after exposure to immobilizing concentrations. Conclusions: Volatile anesthetics selectively disrupt C. elegans behavior. The potency, time course, and recovery characteristics of halothane's effects on three behaviors are similar to its anesthetic properties in vertebrates. The affected nervous system molecules may express structural moths similar to those on vertebrate anesthetic targets.
引用
收藏
页码:901 / 912
页数:12
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