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PubMed_Structured_Abstracts

Id Subject Object Predicate Lexical cue
T1 118-1000 BACKGROUND denotes Mounting evidence from animal studies shows that anesthetic exposure in early life leads to apoptosis in the developing nervous system. This loss of neurons has functional consequences in adulthood. Clinical retrospective reviews have suggested that multiple anesthetic exposures in early childhood are associated with learning disabilities later in life as well. Despite much concern about this phenomenon, little is known about the mechanism by which anesthetics initiate neuronal cell death. Caenorhabditis elegans, a powerful genetic animal model, with precisely characterized neural development and cell death pathways, affords an excellent opportunity to study anesthetic-induced neurotoxicity. We hypothesized that exposing the nematode to volatile anesthetics early in life would induce neuron cell death, producing a behavioral defect that would be manifested in adulthood.
T2 1010-1362 METHODS denotes After synchronization and hatching, larval worms were exposed to volatile anesthetics at their 95% effective concentration for 4 hours. On day 4 of life, exposed and control worms were tested for their ability to sense and move to an attractant (i.e., to chemotax). We determined the rate of successful chemotaxis using a standardized chemotaxis index.
T3 1372-2315 RESULTS denotes Wild-type nematodes demonstrated striking deficits in chemotaxis indices after exposure to isoflurane (ISO) or sevoflurane (SEVO) in the first larval stage (chemotaxis index: untreated, 85 ± 2; ISO, 52 ± 2; SEVO, 47 ± 2; P < 0.05 for both exposures). The mitochondrial mutant gas-1 had a heightened effect from the anesthetic exposure (chemotaxis index: untreated, 71 ± 2; ISO, 29 ± 12; SEVO, 24 ± 13; P < 0.05 for both exposures). In contrast, animals unable to undergo apoptosis because of a mutation in the pathway that mediates programmed cell death (ced-3) retained their ability to sense and move toward an attractant (chemotaxis index: untreated, 76 ± 10; ISO, 73 ± 9; SEVO, 76 ± 10). Furthermore, we discovered that the window of greatest susceptibility to anesthetic neurotoxicity in nematodes occurs in the first larval stage after hatching (L1). This coincides with a period of neurogenesis in this model. All values are means ± SD.
T4 2328-2810 CONCLUSIONS denotes These data indicate that anesthetics affect neurobehavior in nematodes, extending the range of phyla in which early exposure to volatile anesthetics has been shown to cause functional neurological deficits. This implies that anesthetic-induced neurotoxicity occurs via an ancient underlying mechanism. C elegans is a tractable model organism with which to survey an entire genome for molecules that mediate the toxic effects of volatile anesthetics on the developing nervous system.

Allie

Id Subject Object Predicate Lexical cue
SS1_23223110_13_0 1463-1473 expanded denotes isoflurane
SS2_23223110_13_0 1475-1478 abbr denotes ISO
SS1_23223110_13_1 1483-1494 expanded denotes sevoflurane
SS2_23223110_13_1 1496-1500 abbr denotes SEVO
AE1_23223110_13_0 SS1_23223110_13_0 SS2_23223110_13_0 abbreviatedTo isoflurane,ISO
AE1_23223110_13_1 SS1_23223110_13_1 SS2_23223110_13_1 abbreviatedTo sevoflurane,SEVO

PubmedHPO

Id Subject Object Predicate Lexical cue
T1 259-274 HP_0002529 denotes loss of neurons
T2 944-961 HP_0000708 denotes behavioral defect