{"title":"Anaesthetics disrupt complex I-linked respiration and reverse the ATP synthase","authors":"Enrique Rodriguez , Bella Peng , Nick Lane","doi":"10.1016/j.bbabio.2024.149511","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<div><div>The mechanism of volatile general anaesthetics has long been a mystery. Anaesthetics have no structural motifs in common, beyond lipid solubility, yet all exert a similar effect. The fact that the inert gas xenon is an anaesthetic suggests their common mechanism might relate to physical rather than chemical properties. Electron transfer through chiral proteins can induce spin polarization. Recent work suggests that anaesthetics dissipate spin polarization during electron transfer to oxygen, slowing respiration. Here we show that the volatile anaesthetics isoflurane and sevoflurane specifically disrupt complex I-linked respiration in the thoraces of <em>Drosophila melanogaster</em>, with less effect on maximal respiration. Suppression of complex I-linked respiration was greatest with isoflurane. Using high-resolution tissue fluorespirometry, we show that these anaesthetics simultaneously increase mitochondrial membrane potential, implying reversal of the ATP synthase. Inhibition of ATP synthase with oligomycin prevented respiration and increased membrane potential back to the maximal (LEAK state) potential. Magnesium-green fluorescence predicted a collapse in ATP availability following a single anaesthetic dose, consistent with ATP hydrolysis through reversal of the ATP synthase. Raised membrane potential corresponded to a rise in ROS flux, especially with isoflurane. Anaesthetic doses causing respiratory suppression were in the same range as those that induce anaesthesia, although we could not establish tissue concentrations. Our findings show that anaesthetics suppress complex I-linked respiration with concerted downstream effects. But we cannot explain why only mutations in complex I, and not elsewhere in the electron-transfer system, confer hypersensitivity to anaesthetics.</div></div>","PeriodicalId":3,"journal":{"name":"ACS Applied Electronic Materials","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":4.3000,"publicationDate":"2024-09-24","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"ACS Applied Electronic Materials","FirstCategoryId":"99","ListUrlMain":"https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S000527282400481X","RegionNum":3,"RegionCategory":"材料科学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"ENGINEERING, ELECTRICAL & ELECTRONIC","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
The mechanism of volatile general anaesthetics has long been a mystery. Anaesthetics have no structural motifs in common, beyond lipid solubility, yet all exert a similar effect. The fact that the inert gas xenon is an anaesthetic suggests their common mechanism might relate to physical rather than chemical properties. Electron transfer through chiral proteins can induce spin polarization. Recent work suggests that anaesthetics dissipate spin polarization during electron transfer to oxygen, slowing respiration. Here we show that the volatile anaesthetics isoflurane and sevoflurane specifically disrupt complex I-linked respiration in the thoraces of Drosophila melanogaster, with less effect on maximal respiration. Suppression of complex I-linked respiration was greatest with isoflurane. Using high-resolution tissue fluorespirometry, we show that these anaesthetics simultaneously increase mitochondrial membrane potential, implying reversal of the ATP synthase. Inhibition of ATP synthase with oligomycin prevented respiration and increased membrane potential back to the maximal (LEAK state) potential. Magnesium-green fluorescence predicted a collapse in ATP availability following a single anaesthetic dose, consistent with ATP hydrolysis through reversal of the ATP synthase. Raised membrane potential corresponded to a rise in ROS flux, especially with isoflurane. Anaesthetic doses causing respiratory suppression were in the same range as those that induce anaesthesia, although we could not establish tissue concentrations. Our findings show that anaesthetics suppress complex I-linked respiration with concerted downstream effects. But we cannot explain why only mutations in complex I, and not elsewhere in the electron-transfer system, confer hypersensitivity to anaesthetics.
长期以来,挥发性全身麻醉剂的作用机制一直是个谜。除了脂溶性之外,麻醉剂在结构上没有共同之处,但却都能产生类似的效果。惰性气体氙也是一种麻醉剂,这一事实表明它们的共同机制可能与物理特性而非化学特性有关。通过手性蛋白质的电子传递可引起自旋极化。最近的研究表明,麻醉剂会在电子传递到氧气的过程中消散自旋极化,从而减慢呼吸速度。在这里,我们发现挥发性麻醉剂异氟醚和七氟醚会特异性地破坏黑腹果蝇胸廓中与 I 链接的复合呼吸,但对最大呼吸的影响较小。异氟醚对复合物 I 链接呼吸的抑制作用最大。利用高分辨率组织荧光呼吸测定法,我们发现这些麻醉剂同时会增加线粒体膜电位,这意味着 ATP 合成酶发生了逆转。用寡霉素抑制 ATP 合成酶可阻止呼吸作用,并使膜电位恢复到最大(LEAK 状态)电位。镁绿荧光预示着单剂量麻醉后 ATP 的可用性会崩溃,这与通过逆转 ATP 合成酶进行 ATP 水解是一致的。膜电位的升高与 ROS 通量的升高相对应,尤其是异氟醚。导致呼吸抑制的麻醉剂剂量与诱导麻醉的剂量范围相同,但我们无法确定组织浓度。我们的研究结果表明,麻醉剂会抑制复合物 I 链接呼吸,并产生协同下游效应。但我们无法解释为什么只有复合体 I 的突变,而不是电子传递系统的其他部位的突变,才会导致对麻醉剂的过敏。