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BACKGROUND: We tested the hypothesis that two metabolites that are elevated in ketosis (ß-hydroxybutyric acid, and acetone) modulate ion channels in a manner similar to anesthetics and produce anesthesia in animals.
METHODS: RESULTS: Both ß hydroxybutyric acid and acetone enhanced glycine receptor function in the concentration range that is obtained in ketoacidosis in humans. Beta hydroxybutyric acid also enhanced GABAA receptor function at these concentrations. Both acetone and ß-hydroxybutyric acid anesthetized tadpoles, with an EC50 for acetone of 264 ± 2 mM (mean ± se) and for ß-hydroxybutyric acid of 151 ± 11 mM at pH 7.0. Acetone enhanced GABAA receptors at concentrations of 50 mM and above. Inhibition of TRESK channel function was seen with 100 mM acetone or larger concentration. N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor function was inhibited at concentrations of acetone of 200 mM and larger. CONCLUSIONS: Beta hydroxybutyric acid and acetone are anesthetics. Both ketone bodies enhance inhibitory glycine receptors at concentrations observed clinically in ketoacidosis. In addition, ß-hydroxybutyric acid enhances GABAA receptor function at these concentrations. Subanesthetic concentrations of these drugs may contribute to the lethargy and impairment of consciousness seen in ketoacidosis.
Neurotransmitter receptors are widely considered the mediators of anesthetic action (1). But why do animals and their neurotransmitter receptors respond to inhaled anesthetics? Few organisms are exposed to such compounds, and anesthetized organisms are virtually never observed in nature. One proposed physical mechanism of anesthesia hypothesizes that receptors are adapted to alterations in bilayer properties induced by the high, fluctuating concentrations of neurotransmitters at synapses (2), and that this produces a selective pressure for susceptibility to anesthetics. This hypothesis raises the possibility that sustained high concentrations of other endogenous compounds might produce anesthetic effects, albeit without providing any selective pressure to maintain the response to anesthetics. Ketone bodies (acetone, ß-hydroxybutyric acid, and acetoacetic acid) provide attractive anesthetic-like possibilities because they span the largest concentration range of all circulating metabolites, the upper extremes of which are associated with central nervous system (CNS) depression. In health, ketone body concentrations are <100 µM (3). In diabetic ketoacidosis, the combined concentration of acetoacetic acid and ß-hydroxybutyric acid can exceed 25 mM (4). Ninety percent of these ketoacids are ß-hydroxybutyric acid (5). Acetone concentrations approach 9 mM (6). CNS depression in diabetic ketoacidosis ranges from sedation to unconsciousness, to unresponsiveness to noxious stimuli, a range remarkably similar to that produced by subanesthetic to surgical concentrations of general anesthetics (7). Insulin administration readily reverses the depression. Hyperosmolar nonketotic diabetic coma in non–insulin-dependent diabetes produces similar neurologic findings. The impairments in consciousness associated with this condition and diabetic ketoacidosis have been attributed, in part, to the electrolyte abnormalities and dehydration associated with hyperglycemia. However, when compared with hyperosmolar nonketotic diabetic coma, diabetic ketoacidosis produces lesser glucose levels and dehydration and a greater ketoacidosis (8), suggesting that metabolites generated in diabetic ketoacidosis may provide the basis for impaired consciousness.
In the present study, we investigated whether ß-hydroxybutyric acid and acetone have anesthetic-like effects in animals and on ion channels. We used methods widely used in studies of anesthetic mechanisms to investigate the depressant effects of these compounds. In particular, we assessed the capacity of these compounds to reversibly prevent movement in tadpoles (9). We also tested whether, like inhaled anesthetics, these compounds enhanced the function of glycine, GABAA (
The University of California San Francisco institutional animal care and use committee approved all animal studies.
Measurement of Anesthetic Potency in Tadpoles A male frog was killed and the testes removed and kept in 1x MBS (88 mM NaCl, 1 mM KCl, 1 mM MgSO4, 5 mM HEPES, 2.5 mM NaHCO3, adjusted to pH 7.0) on ice. A sperm slurry was made by crushing the testes in a small amount of 0.1x MMR + gentamicin (10 mM NaCl, 0.18 mM KCl, 0.2 mM CaCl2, 0.1 mM MgCl2, 0.5 mM HEPES, 50 µg/mL gentamicin, adjusted to pH 7.0) and kept on ice until the fertilization step. Eggs were collected within 10 min of laying, the high salt MBS was removed, and the eggs were covered with the sperm slurry. After upward rotation of the animal pole indicated successful fertilization, eggs were placed in 0.1x MMR. Batches of 30–40 eggs were kept in 100x 15 mM Petri dishes in 0.1x MMR + gentamicin for the first 2 days; the developing embryos then were kept in 0.1x MMR without gentamicin. Media was changed every day. To test anesthetic potency, 7 to 10-day-old tadpoles were allowed to equilibrate for 30 min in Petri dishes in 0.1x MMR containing the compound under study. Tadpoles were prodded on their side for 30 s with a glass rod. Tadpoles that did not respond to prodding were classified as nonmoving. Tadpoles that responded to any amount of prodding were classified as moving. Nonmoving tadpoles were removed and placed in 0.1x MMR to assess recovery.
Oocyte Preparation for Nucleic Acid Injection
GABAA and Glycine Receptor Studies Transmembrane potentials were kept constant at –80 mV. Perfusion of oocytes with frog Ringer solution (115 mM NaCl, 2.5 mM KCl, 1.8 mM CaCl2, 10 mM HEPES, filtered and adjusted to pH 7.4) for 5 min was changed to perfusion with an identical solution containing agonist (0.03 mM GABA or 0.075 mM glycine, concentrations in the EC10–EC20 range) for 20 s followed by a 5 min washout of frog Ringer solution. These studies then were repeated in the presence of various concentrations of acetone or ß-hydroxybutyric acid. A solution containing study compound in frog Ringer was then perfused for 100 s followed by the same concentration in frog Ringer plus agonist. Return to baseline was confirmed after washout with frog Ringer solution. For the studies of ß-hydroxybutyric acid, sucrose was added to the frog Ringer solution in the control portion of the study to compensate for the added osmolarity of the ß-hydroxybutyric acid.
Acetone Blood-Gas Partition Coefficient
Statistics
where F(x) is the fraction of immobile tadpoles at concentration x, n is the Hill coefficient, and EC50 is the concentration at which half of the tadpoles do not move in response to prodding. EC50's, Hill coefficients, and currents through ion channels were compared using a Student's t-test. P < 0.05 was taken as significant.
Both acetone and ß-hydroxybutyric acid reversibly anesthetized tadpoles (Fig. 1). The EC50 for acetone was 264 ± 2 mM (mean ± se), with a Hill number of 41 ± 12. The EC50 for ß-hydroxybutyric acid was 151 ± 11 mM, with a Hill number of 5 ± 1. The effect of both compounds was reversible: all tadpoles recovered from exposure to acetone and ß-hydroxybutyric acid.
Acetone and ß-hydroxybutyric acid enhanced the function of
ß-Hydroxybutyric acid did not modulate the function of NR1/NR2A NMDA receptors, or TRESK channels (data not shown). Concentrations of acetone exceeding those observed in diabetic ketoacidosis did, however, modulate the function of these channels (Fig. 4) and the GABAA receptor studied (Fig. 3). Fifty millimolar and larger acetone concentrations enhanced
Current tracings for electrophysiologic studies are in Fig. 5 for ß-hydroxybutyric acid and in Fig. 6 for acetone.
At room temperature (20°C) the blood-gas partition coefficient for acetone was 611 ± 15, and the frog Ringer or gas partition coefficient was 744 ± 14. At 37°C, the blood-gas partition coefficient for acetone was 281 ± 8, and the frog Ringer-gas partition coefficient was 323 ± 9.
We studied the anesthetic effect of two ketone bodies, acetone and ß-hydroxybutyric acid. Both study ketone bodies were anesthetics. Both produced a reversible state of unresponsiveness (no movement) to prodding in tadpoles. The partial pressure of acetone bathing the tadpoles probably equals the partial pressure inside the tadpole because acetone is a small uncharged molecule, which, accordingly, should readily pass into the tadpole. The concentrations inside the tadpole and in the bath should also be similar because the blood-Ringer partition coefficient is not far from 1.0. The EC50 for acetone therefore likely reflects the acetone concentration and partial pressure in the CNS of the tadpole at anesthesia. By contrast, the concentration of ß-hydroxybutyric acid bathing tadpoles probably exceeds the concentration in the tadpole, because only the uncharged form of this molecule can penetrate the tissues of the tadpole. Given its pKa of approximately 4.7, only a small fraction of ß-hydroxybutyric acid will be uncharged at neutral pH. Thus the EC50 calculated from bath application of ß-hydroxybutyric acid probably over-estimates the concentration in the tadpole's nervous system that produces anesthesia. Nonetheless, our results unambiguously show that acetone and ß-hydroxybutyric acid are anesthetics.
Both acetone and ß-hydroxybutyric acid markedly enhanced glycine receptor function in the concentration range encountered in ketoacidosis. This enhancement approximates that produced by inhaled anesthetics at MAC (10). In addition, ß-hydroxybutyric acid enhanced GABAA receptor function, though at the higher concentrations seen in ketoacidosis that produces symptoms of CNS depression. We did not find an effect of ß-hydroxybutyric acid or acetone on NR1/NR2A NMDA receptors, or TRESK channels, or of acetone on Our data indicate that enhancement of glycinergic currents is insufficient to produce surgical anesthesia on its own: ketone bodies increase in healthy humans to a few millimolar when intake of carbohydrates and gluconeogenic amino acids is limited, such as in diets high in fat (16), in starvation (17), during fasting, and in prolonged exercise. However, these concentrations do not produce sedation, even though they markedly enhance glycine receptor function. It is not until higher ketone body concentrations are achieved, such as those that occur pathologically in diabetic ketoacidosis, several genetic metabolic diseases, ketotic hypoglycemia of childhood, alcoholic ketoacidosis, corticosteroid or growth hormone deficiency, and ingestion of salicylates that lethargy is seen (3). The development of symptoms at these higher concentrations may be a result of the additional inhibitory effect on GABAA receptors by ß-hydroxybutyric acid at these concentrations. That is, the metabolic brain disease seen in ketoacidosis may be a subanesthetic or, in some cases an anesthetic, state resulting, in part, from accumulated metabolites. Enhancement of glycinergic responses may contribute to this depression, as well as GABAA receptors. It may also plausibly involve other anesthetic-sensitive channels (or isoforms which we have not studied), or actions on the channels we have studied by metabolites that we have not investigated, such as acetoacetic acid or the gluconeogenic amino acids that are elevated as the result of protein catabolism in diabetic ketoacidosis. For acetone, we could study the high concentrations that produced anesthesia both in tadpoles and in expressed receptors. To compare blood concentrations in humans with the concentrations applied to ion channels in perfusates containing frog Ringer solution, we measured the blood-gas and frog Ringer-gas partition coefficients for acetone. Acetone was slightly more soluble in frog Ringer solution (by 15%–20%) compared with blood. Thus, the concentrations we applied to expressed channels were, indeed, in the range produced by ketosis. At concentrations approaching those that produced anesthesia in tadpoles, anesthetic-like effects were produced on some of the channels studied. Concentrations exceeding 50 mM enhanced GABAA receptor currents, while those exceeding 200 mM inhibited NMDA receptor function. These effects may contribute to the anesthesia produced in tadpoles by acetone. Inhibition, rather than enhancement, of TRESK currents was produced by acetone above 100 mM. If anything, such effects might pose an antianesthetic effect. Ketogenic states associated with fasting or ketogenic diets have anticonvulsant effects (16,18): 40% of patients on a hyperketogenic diet have a 90% reduction in seizures (19). Animal studies corroborate this effect (20,21). The mechanism for the anticonvulsant effect is unknown. One hypothesis suggests that chronic ketosis improves cerebral energy reserves (22,23). Our results suggest that ketone bodies may also enhance chloride conductances at glycinergic and GABAergic synapses. This would be expected to produce neuronal hyperpolarization, thereby increasing the seizure threshold much as benzodiazepines increase seizures thresholds by enhancing chloride currents through GABAA receptors. In summary, both acetone and ß-hydroxybutyric acid are anesthetics. Acetone and ß-hydroxybutyric acid produce anesthetic-like enhancement of glycine and GABAA receptor currents at concentrations found in ketosis. At concentrations exceeding those observed in ketosis, but below the concentration producing anesthesia, acetone enhanced GABAA receptor function and inhibited NMDA and TRESK channel function.
Accepted for publication May 7, 2007. Supported by NIGMS R01 GM069379 (to J.S.). Dr. Eger is a paid consultant to Baxter Healthcare Corp. Reprints will not be available from the author.
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