Biomedicine & Pharmacotherapy (Jul 2024)

Dorsal raphe nucleus to basolateral amygdala 5-HTergic neural circuit modulates restoration of consciousness during sevoflurane anesthesia

  • Qian Yu,
  • YuLing Wang,
  • LeYuan Gu,
  • WeiHui Shao,
  • JiaXuan Gu,
  • Lu Liu,
  • XiTing Lian,
  • Qing Xu,
  • YuanLi Zhang,
  • Yue Yang,
  • ZhuoYue Zhang,
  • YaXuan Wu,
  • HaiXiang Ma,
  • Yue Shen,
  • Wen Ye,
  • YanHui Wu,
  • HuiFang Yang,
  • LiHai Chen,
  • Kazuki Nagayasu,
  • HongHai Zhang

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 176
p. 116937

Abstract

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The advent of general anesthesia (GA) has significant implications for clinical practice. However, the exact mechanisms underlying GA-induced transitions in consciousness remain elusive. Given some similarities between GA and sleep, the sleep-arousal neural nuclei and circuits involved in sleep-arousal, including the 5-HTergic system, could be implicated in GA. Herein, we utilized pharmacology, optogenetics, chemogenetics, fiber photometry, and retrograde tracing to demonstrate that both endogenous and exogenous activation of the 5-HTergic neural circuit between the dorsal raphe nucleus (DR) and basolateral amygdala (BLA) promotes arousal and facilitates recovery of consciousness from sevoflurane anesthesia. Notably, the 5-HT1A receptor within this pathway holds a pivotal role. Our findings will be conducive to substantially expanding our comprehension of the neural circuit mechanisms underlying sevoflurane anesthesia and provide a potential target for modulating consciousness, ultimately leading to a reduction in anesthetic dose requirements and side effects.

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