The Common Inhalational Anesthetic Sevoflurane Induces Apoptosis and Increases Β-Amyloid Protein Levels

The Common Inhalational Anesthetic Sevoflurane Induces Apoptosis and Increases Β-Amyloid Protein Levels

ORIGINAL CONTRIBUTION The Common Inhalational Anesthetic Sevoflurane Induces Apoptosis and Increases ␤-Amyloid Protein Levels Yuanlin Dong, MD; Guohua Zhang, MD, PhD; Bin Zhang, MD; Robert D. Moir, PhD; Weiming Xia, PhD; Edward R. Marcantonio, MD; Deborah J. Culley, MD; Gregory Crosby, MD; Rudolph E. Tanzi, PhD; Zhongcong Xie, MD, PhD Objective: To assess the effects of sevoflurane, the most Z-VAD decreased the effects of sevoflurane on apopto- commonly used inhalation anesthetic, on apoptosis and sis and A␤. Sevoflurane-induced caspase-3 activation was ␤-amyloid protein (A␤) levels in vitro and in vivo. attenuated by the ␥-secretase inhibitor L-685,458 and was potentiated by A␤. These results suggest that sevoflu- Subjects: Naive mice, H4 human neuroglioma cells, and rane induces caspase activation which, in turn, en- H4 human neuroglioma cells stably transfected to ex- hances ␤-site amyloid precursor protein–cleaving en- press full-length amyloid precursor protein. zyme and A␤ levels. Increased A␤ levels then induce further rounds of apoptosis. Interventions: Human H4 neuroglioma cells stably transfected to express full-length amyloid precursor pro- Conclusions: These results suggest that inhalational an- tein were exposed to 4.1% sevoflurane for 6 hours. Mice esthetic sevoflurane may promote Alzheimer disease neu- received 2.5% sevoflurane for 2 hours. Caspase-3 acti- ropathogenesis. If confirmed in human subjects, it may vation, apoptosis, and A␤ levels were assessed. be prudent to caution against the use of sevoflurane as an anesthetic, especially in those suspected of possess- ␤ Results: Sevoflurane induced apoptosis and elevated lev- ing excessive levels of cerebral A . els of ␤-site amyloid precursor protein–cleaving en- zyme and A␤ in vitro and in vivo. The caspase inhibitor Arch Neurol. 2009;66(5):620-631 XCESSIVE ␤-AMYLOID PRO- tween 1.2 and 1.6 for the association of pre- tein (A␤) accumulation is a vious general anesthesia/surgery and AD. major pathological hall- Moreover, the age of onset of AD has been mark of Alzheimer disease inversely correlated with cumulative expo- (AD).1,2 ␤-amyloid protein is sure to general anesthesia prior to 50 years Eproduced via serial proteolysis of the amy- of age.20,21 A recent study illustrated that pa- loid precursor protein (APP) by aspartyl pro- tients having coronary artery bypass graft tease ␤-site APP-cleaving enzyme (BACE; surgery with general anesthesia are at greater ␤-secretase) and ␥-secretase. ␤-site APP- risk for the emergence of AD than those hav- cleaving enzyme cleaves APP to generate a ing percutaneous transluminal coronary an- 99-residue membrane-associated C- gioplasty with local anesthesia.22 Though terminus fragment (APP-C99). This frag- there have been no conclusive studies to ment is further cleaved by ␥-secretase to re- strongly suggest an association between an- lease the 4-kDa A␤ and APP intracellular esthesia and AD, there have been studies domain.3-5 Increasing evidence suggests a suggesting that anesthetics such as isoflu- role for caspase activation and apoptosis in rane may promote AD neuropathogenesis AD neuropathogenesis.6-17 Recent studies in vitro and in vivo. A recent study showed suggested that caspase activation and apop- that an insult from a middle cerebral ar- tosis may enhance BACE levels to facilitate tery occlusion for 2 hours in rats caused tem- APP processing, leading to increases in A␤ porary increases in APP and A␤ staining in levels.15,18,19 a brain area near the ischemic region as well An estimated 200 million patients world- as long-term (up to 9 months) APP and A␤ Author Affiliations are listed at wide have surgery with anesthesia each year. deposits in a brain area distant from the is- the end of this article. Several studies showed an odds ratio of be- chemic region.23 These findings suggest that (REPRINTED) ARCH NEUROL / VOL 66 (NO. 5), MAY 2009 WWW.ARCHNEUROL.COM 620 ©2009 American Medical Association. All rights reserved. Downloaded From: https://jamanetwork.com/ on 09/23/2021 a transient insult, eg, ischemia or anesthesia with isoflu- chusetts). The temperature of the anesthetizing chamber was rane, could lead to secondary and persistent brain inju- controlled to maintain a mean (SD) rectal temperature in the ries. However, whether inhalation anesthetics other than animals of 37°C(0.5°C). Mean arterial blood pressure was mea- isoflurane can promote AD neuropathogenesis remains un- sured noninvasively using a tail cuff (Kent Scientific Corpora- known. We therefore set out to determine the effects of sevo- tion, Torrington, Connecticut) in the anesthetized mice. An- esthesia was terminated by discontinuing sevoflurane and placing flurane, currently the most commonly used inhalational an- animals in a chamber containing 100% O until 20 minutes af- esthetic, on caspase activation, apoptosis, APP processing, 2 ␤ ter the return of their righting reflex. They were then returned and levels of BACE and A in H4 human neuroglioma cells to individual home cages until they were humanely killed. Mice as well as in naive mice. were killed by decapitation 6, 12, and 24 hours after sevoflu- rane anesthesia. The brain was removed rapidly and the pre- METHODS frontal cortex was dissected out and frozen in liquid nitrogen for subsequent processing to determine caspase activation and levels of FL-APP, APP-C99, APP-C83, BACE, and A␤. CELL LINES BRAIN TISSUE LYSIS AND PROTEIN We used H4 human neuroglioma cells (naive H4 cells) and H4 AMOUNT QUANTIFICATION human neuroglioma cells stably transfected to express full- length (FL)–APP (H4-APP cells). All cell lines were cultured in The harvested brain tissues were homogenized on ice using im- Dulbecco Modified Eagle Medium (high glucose) containing 9% munoprecipitation buffer (10mM Tris-HCl; pH, 7.4; 150mM heat-inactivated fetal calf serum, 100-Us/mL penicillin, 100- NaCl; 2 mM EDTA; 0.5% Nonidet P-40) plus protease inhibi- µg/mL streptomycin, and 2mM L-glutamine. Stably transfected tors (1-µg/mL aprotinin, 1-µg/mL leupeptin, 1-µg/mL pep- H4 cells were additionally supplemented with 200- µg/mL G418. statin A). The lysates were collected, centrifuged at 12 000 rpm for 10 minutes, and quantified for total proteins by BCA pro- CELL TREATMENT tein assay kit. The cells were treated with 21% oxygen, 5% carbon dioxide, WESTERN BLOT ANALYSIS and 4.1% sevoflurane (2 minimum alveolar concentration) for 6 hours, during which time the cells were incubated in serum- The cells and brain tissues were harvested at the end of the ex- free cell culture media, as described by Xie et al.24 21% O ,5% 2 periment and were subjected to Western blot analysis, as de- CO , and 4.1% sevoflurane were delivered from an anesthesia 2 scribed by Xie et al.25 Antibodies A8717 (1:2000; Sigma, St Louis, machine to a sealed plastic box in a 37°C incubator containing Missouri), C66 (1:1000; generous gift of Dora Kovacs, PhD, at 6-well plates seeded with 1 million cells in 1.5-mL cell culture Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School), media. A Datex infrared gas analyzer (Puritan-Bennett, Tewks- and anti–␤-actin (1:5000; Sigma) were used to visualize FL- bury, Massachusetts) was used to continuously monitor the con- APP (110 kDa), APP-C83 (12 kDa), APP-C99 (10 kDa), and centrations of delivered CO ,O, and sevoflurane. In the in- 2 2 ␤-actin (42 kDa), respectively. A caspase-3 antibody (1:1000; teraction studies, the cells were treated with Z-VAD (100µM), Cell Signaling Technology Inc, Beverly, Massachusetts) was used A␤40 (7.5µM) plus A␤42 (7.5µM), and L-685,458 (0.5µM) 1 to recognize the caspase-3 fragment (17-20 kDa) resulting from hour before the treatment with 4.1% sevoflurane. Control con- cleavage at asparate position 175 and caspase-3 FL (35-40 kDa). ditions included 5% CO plus 21% O , which did not affect 2 2 Rabbit polyclonal anti–BACE1 antibody ab2077 (1:1000; Ab- caspase-3 activation, cell viability, APP processing, or A␤ gen- cam, Cambridge, Massachusetts) was used to detect the pro- eration (data not shown). tein levels of BACE (65 kDa). The quantification of Western blots was performed in 2 steps, as described by Xie et al.25 Briefly, CELL LYSIS AND PROTEIN the intensity of signals was analyzed by using an image pro- AMOUNT QUANTIFICATION gram from the National Institutes of Health (NIH ImageJ; Bethesda, Maryland). First, we used levels of ␤-actin to nor- Cell pellets were detergent-extracted on ice using immunopre- malize (eg, determining ratio of FL-APP amount to ␤-actin cipitation buffer (10mM Tris-hydrochloride [HCl]; pH, 7.4; amount) the levels of FL-APP, APP-C83, APP-C99, FL- 150mM sodium chloride [NaCl]; 2mM EDTA; 0.5% Nonidet caspase-3, caspase-3 fragment, BACE, and A␤ to control for the P-40) plus protease inhibitors (1-µg/mL aprotinin, 1-µg/mL leu- loading differences in total protein amounts. Second, we pre- peptin, and pepstatin A). The lysates were collected, centri- sented the changes in the levels of FL-APP, APP-C83, APP- fuged at 12 000 revolutions per minute (rpm) for 10 minutes, C99, FL-caspase-3, caspase-3 fragment, A␤, and BACE in the and quantified for total proteins by the BCA (bicinchoninic acid) cells or animals treated with sevoflurane, Z-VAD, A␤, and protein assay kit (Pierce, Iselin, New Jersey). L-685,458 as the percentage of those in the cells or animals treated with controls. We refer to 100% caspase-3 activation, ␤ MOUSE ANESTHESIA AND TREATMENT FL-APP, APP-C83, APP-C99, A , and BACE in this article as control levels for the purpose of comparison with experimen- The animal protocol was approved by the Standing Commit- tal conditions. tee on Animals at Massachusetts General Hospital.

View Full Text

Details

  • File Type
    pdf
  • Upload Time
    -
  • Content Languages
    English
  • Upload User
    Anonymous/Not logged-in
  • File Pages
    12 Page
  • File Size
    -

Download

Channel Download Status
Express Download Enable

Copyright

We respect the copyrights and intellectual property rights of all users. All uploaded documents are either original works of the uploader or authorized works of the rightful owners.

  • Not to be reproduced or distributed without explicit permission.
  • Not used for commercial purposes outside of approved use cases.
  • Not used to infringe on the rights of the original creators.
  • If you believe any content infringes your copyright, please contact us immediately.

Support

For help with questions, suggestions, or problems, please contact us