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. 1995 Jan;82(1):205-13.
doi: 10.1097/00000542-199501000-00025.

Ketamine inhibits glutamate-, N-methyl-D-aspartate-, and quisqualate-stimulated cGMP production in cultured cerebral neurons

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Ketamine inhibits glutamate-, N-methyl-D-aspartate-, and quisqualate-stimulated cGMP production in cultured cerebral neurons

J M Gonzales et al. Anesthesiology. 1995 Jan.

Abstract

Background: Glutamatergic signaling has been linked to the recently discovered neurotransmitter/neuromodulator nitric oxide (NO), and several classes of anesthetics block some step in glutamatergic signaling. This study was designed to determine whether or not ketamine would prevent NO-dependent cGMP production stimulated by glutamate (GLU) and the GLU analogs NMDA, quisqualate (QUIS), and kainate (KAIN).

Methods: Primary cultures of cortical neurons and glia (prepared from 16-day gestational rat fetuses) were used after 12-16 days in culture. Reactions were carried out in magnesium-free buffer containing 100 microM 3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine, and cGMP content of cultures was used as a bioassay of NO production.

Results: Cyclic GMP production stimulated by sodium nitroprusside (100 microM) occurred predominately in neurons and not in glia. Neurons were spontaneously active in these cultures; basal cGMP production was decreased by 50% in the presence of 1 microM tetrodotoxin (TTX). Glutamate (100 microM), NMDA (100 microM), QUIS (300 microM), and KAIN (100 microM) each increased cGMP content of neuronal cultures. L-NMMA (100 microM), a NO synthase inhibitor, prevented the stimulation of cGMP production by GLU or its analogs. Pretreatment with MK-801 (1 microM) or ketamine (10-100 microM) inhibited GLU-, NMDA-, and QUIS-stimulated cGMP production. Quisqualate-stimulated responses were the most sensitive to inhibition by ketamine and NMDA-stimulated responses were the least sensitive to inhibition. MK-801 and ketamine did not significantly inhibit KAIN-stimulated cGMP production. CNQX (10 microns) blocked KAIN-stimulated cGMP production only.

Conclusions: The authors' data demonstrate that ketamine inhibited NO synthesis stimulated by NMDA- and non-NMDA-receptor specific analogs. Our findings indicate that blockade of QUIS- as well as NMDA-subtypes of GLU- receptor may be important in the development of ketamine-induced anesthesia.

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