4.7 Article

HCN1 Channel Subunits Are a Molecular Substrate for Hypnotic Actions of Ketamine

期刊

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
卷 29, 期 3, 页码 560-569

出版社

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.3481-08.2009

关键词

anesthesia; I-h; hyperpolarization-activated current; propofol; cortical pyramidal neurons; sleep

资金

  1. American Heart Association [0665349U]
  2. National Institutes of Health-National Institutes of General Medical Sciences [GM66181]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Ketamine has important anesthetic, analgesic, and psychotropic actions. It is widely believed that NMDA receptor inhibition accounts for ketamine actions, but there remains a dearth of behavioral evidence to support this hypothesis. Here, we present an alternative, behaviorally relevant molecular substrate for anesthetic effects of ketamine: the HCN1 pacemaker channels that underlie a neuronal hyperpolarization-activated cationic current (I-h). Ketamine caused subunit-specific inhibition of recombinant HCN1-containing channels and neuronal Ih at clinically relevant concentrations; the channels were more potently inhibited by S-(+)-ketamine than racemic ketamine, consistent with anesthetic actions of the compounds. In cortical pyramidal neurons from wild-type, but not HCN1 knock-out mice, ketamine induced membrane hyperpolarization and enhanced dendritosomatic synaptic coupling; both effects are known to promote cortical synchronization and support slow cortical rhythms, like those accompanying anesthetic-induced hypnosis. Accordingly, we found that the potency for ketamine to provoke a loss-of-righting reflex, a behavioral correlate of hypnosis, was strongly reduced in HCN1 knock-out mice. In addition, hypnotic sensitivity to two other intravenous anesthetics in HCN1 knock-out mice matched effects on HCN1 channels; propofol selectively inhibited HCN1 channels and propofol sensitivity was diminished in HCN1 knock-out mice, whereas etomidate had no effect on HCN1 channels and hypnotic sensitivity to etomidate was unaffected by HCN1 gene deletion. These data advance HCN1 channels as a novel molecular target for ketamine, provide a plausible neuronal mechanism for enhanced cortical synchronization during anesthetic-induced hypnosis and suggest that HCN1 channels might contribute to other unexplained actions of ketamine.

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