Differential effects of general anaesthetics on identified molluscan neurones in situ and in culture
- PMID: 1487134
- DOI: 10.1016/0306-3623(92)90276-p
Differential effects of general anaesthetics on identified molluscan neurones in situ and in culture
Abstract
1. The only unifying principle of general anaesthesia is that general anaesthetics interact with membrane components and no single cellular mechanism appears to explain their widespread effects in the central nervous system. 2. The gastropod mollusc, Lymnaea stagnalis, provides an excellent model system for studies on general anaesthetics because it has large, uniquely identifiable nerve cells. Several of these cells are interneurones with identified neurotransmitters and monosynaptic connections to other cells. 3. Recent work on Lymnaea neurones suggests that calcium currents are depressed by volatile general anaesthetics applied in the clinical range, whilst evidence from other preparations indicates that there is a rise in intracellular calcium concentration following application of these substances. 4. Identified Lymnaea neurones have different responses to applied anaesthetics, irrespective of the anaesthetic used. Following application of halothane, barbiturates and several other anaesthetic agents, some cells gradually become quiescent after a short period, whilst in others a series of paroxysmal depolarizing shifts occur prior to quiescence. 5. Cultured neurones of Lymnaea, Helisoma and related species retain their characteristic action potential types and neurotransmitter identity. Their responses to anaesthetics are similar to those in the intact brain. They may also form synapses in culture. Thus, they are a useful tool for studying the cellular and subcellular actions of general anaesthetics.
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