• Reg Anesth Pain Med · Jan 2013

    Local anesthetic-induced inhibition of human neutrophil priming: the influence of structure, lipophilicity, and charge.

    • Susanne Picardi, Sibylle Cartellieri, Danja Groves, Klaus Hahnenkamp, Klaus Hahnenekamp, Peter Gerner, Marcel E Durieux, Markus F Stevens, Philipp Lirk, and Markus W Hollmann.
    • Department of Anesthesiology, University Hospital Maastricht, The Netherlands.
    • Reg Anesth Pain Med. 2013 Jan 1; 38 (1): 9-15.

    Background And ObjectivesLocal anesthetics (LAs) are widely known for inhibition of voltage-gated sodium channels underlying their antiarrhythmic and antinociceptive effects. However, LAs have significant immunomodulatory properties and were shown to affect human neutrophil functions independent of sodium-channel blockade. Previous studies suggest a highly selective interaction between LAs and the α-subunit of G protein-coupled receptors of the Gq/G11 family as underlying mechanism. Providing a detailed structure function analysis, this study aimed to determine the active parts within the LA molecule responsible for the effects on human neutrophil priming.MethodsHuman neutrophils were incubated with structurally different LAs for 60 minutes, followed by priming and activation using either platelet-activating factor or lysophosphatidic acid and N-formyl-methionyl-L-leucyl-L-phenylalanine. Superoxide anion generation was determined, using the cytochrome c reduction assay.ResultsDifferences in priming inhibition of human neutrophils between LAs were smaller than expected, although significant. Ester-linked LAs blocked priming responses more effectively than did amide LAs. Furthermore, the inhibitory potency of LAs on priming decreased with an increase of their respective octanol-buffer coefficient, and inhibition did not correlate with sodium-channel-blocking potency. Charge was not crucially required for priming inhibition, yet it played a role in effect size.ConclusionsLocal anesthetics significantly attenuated Gαq-protein-mediated neutrophil priming. The most potent inhibition was achieved by ester compounds, inversely correlated with their octanol-buffer coefficient, and enhanced by permanent charges within the LA molecule. No correlation to their potency of blocking sodium channels was found.

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