• Anesthesia and analgesia · Mar 2004

    Intracellular calcium increases in growth cones exposed to tetracaine.

    • Shigeru Saito, Inas A M Radwan, Koichi Nishikawa, Hideaki Obata, Tomonori Okamoto, Toshio Kanno, and Fumio Goto.
    • Department of Anesthesiology, Gunma University Graduate School of Medicine, Maebashi, Japan. shigerus@showa.gunma-u.ac.jp
    • Anesth. Analg. 2004 Mar 1; 98 (3): 841-5, table of contents.

    UnlabelledNeurotoxicity of local anesthetics has been reported for both matured and growing neurons. In the present study, we examined if tetracaine increases Ca(2+) concentration during growth cone collapse. Intracellular Ca(2+) concentration was measured by fura 2/AM after exposure to tetracaine. Tetracaine (1-2 mM) induced increases in intra-growth cone Ca(2+) concentration (P < 0.01). The Ca(2+) hot spot was expanded into the neurite from the periphery towards the cell body. When tetracaine was applied to growth cones in Ca(2+) free media, the increase was minor. However, tetracaine induced growth cone collapse even in the culture media, which did not contain Ca(2+). Ni(2+) (100 microM; a general Ca(2+) channel inhibitor) and BAPTA-AM (5 microM; intracellular Ca(2+) chelator) could not inhibit growth cone collapse induced by 1-2 mM tetracaine. Tetracaine (>1 mM) induces collapse and Ca(2+) increase at growth cones simultaneously; however, these two phenomena might be provoked independently.ImplicationsTetracaine induced intracellular Ca(2+) increases and growth cone collapse in dorsal root ganglion neurons. The Ca(2+) hot spot in the growth cone expanded into the neurite from periphery towards the cell body.

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