Nature, Vol.367, No.6464, 607-614, 1994
Molecular and Cellular Mechanisms of General-Anesthesia
General anaesthetics are much more selective than Is usually appreciated and may act by binding to only a small number of targets in the central nervous system. At surgical concentrations their principal effects are on ligand;gated (rather than voltage-gated) ion channels, with potentiation of postsynaptic inhibitory channel activity best fitting the pharmacological profile observed in general anaesthesia. Although the role of second messengers remains uncertain, it is now clear that anaesthetics act directly on proteins rather than on lipids.
Keywords:NICOTINIC ACETYLCHOLINE-RECEPTOR;RAT HIPPOCAMPAL-NEURONS;INHIBITORY POSTSYNAPTIC CURRENTS;AMINOBUTYRIC ACID(A) RECEPTORS;ANESTHETIC TARGET SITES;GH3 PITUITARY-CELLS;VOLATILE ANESTHETICS;XENOPUS OOCYTES;OPTICAL ISOMERS;CALCIUM CURRENT