• Anesthesiology · Feb 2025

    GABAergic neurons in the central amygdala promote emergence from isoflurane anesthesia in mice.

    • Jin-Sheng Zhang, Wei Yao, Lei Zhang, Zhang-Shu Li, Xia-Ting Gong, Li-Li Duan, Zhi-Xian Huang, Tong Chen, Jin-Chuang Huang, Shu-Xiang Yang, Changxi Yu, Ping Cai, and Li Chen.
    • Department of Pharmacology, School of Pharmacy, Fujian Medical University, Fuzhou, China.
    • Anesthesiology. 2025 Feb 1; 142 (2): 278297278-297.

    BackgroundRecent evidence indicates that general anesthesia and sleep-wake behavior share some overlapping neural substrates. γ-Aminobutyric acid-mediated (GABAergic) neurons in the central amygdala have a high firing rate during wakefulness and play a role in regulating arousal-related behaviors. The objective of this study was to investigate whether central amygdala GABAergic neurons participate in the regulation of isoflurane general anesthesia and uncover the underlying neural circuitry.MethodsFiber photometry recording was used to determine the changes in calcium signals of central amygdala GABAergic neurons during isoflurane anesthesia in Vgat-Cre mice. Chemogenetic and optogenetic approaches were used to manipulate the activity of central amygdala GABAergic neurons, and a righting reflex test was used to determine the induction and emergence from isoflurane anesthesia. Cortical electroencephalogram (EEG) recording was used to assess the changes in EEG spectral power and burst-suppression ratio during 0.8% and 1.4% isoflurane anesthesia, respectively. Both male and female mice were used in this study.ResultsThe calcium signals of central amygdala GABAergic neurons decreased during the induction of isoflurane anesthesia and were restored during the emergence. Chemogenetic activation of central amygdala GABAergic neurons delayed induction time (mean ± SD, vehicle vs . clozapine-N-oxide: 58.75 ± 5.42 s vs . 67.63 ± 5.01 s; n = 8; P = 0.0017) and shortened emergence time (385.50 ± 66.26 s vs . 214.60 ± 40.21 s; n = 8; P = 0.0017) from isoflurane anesthesia. Optogenetic activation of central amygdala GABAergic neurons produced a similar effect. Furthermore, optogenetic activation decreased EEG delta power (prestimulation vs . stimulation: 46.63 ± 4.40% vs . 34.16 ± 6.47%; n = 8; P = 0.0195) and burst-suppression ratio (83.39 ± 5.15% vs . 52.60 ± 12.98%; n = 8; P = 0.0003). Moreover, optogenetic stimulation of terminals of central amygdala GABAergic neurons in the basal forebrain also promoted cortical activation and accelerated behavioral emergence from isoflurane anesthesia.ConclusionsThe results suggest that central amygdala GABAergic neurons play a role in general anesthesia regulation, which facilitates behavioral and cortical emergence from isoflurane anesthesia through the GABAergic central amygdala-basal forebrain pathway.Copyright © 2024 The Author(s). Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc., on behalf of the American Society of Anesthesiologists.

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