Abstract

Stress-induced α-synuclein aggregation, especially the most toxic species (oligomers), may precede synaptic and cognitive dysfunction. Under pathological conditions, α-synuclein is degraded primarily through the autophagic/lysosomal pathway. We assessed the involvement of autophagy in α-synuclein aggregation and cognitive impairment following general anesthesia and surgical stress. Autophagy was found to be suppressed in the aged rat hippocampus after either 4-h propofol anesthesia alone or 2-h propofol anesthesia during a laparotomy surgery. This inhibition of autophagy was accompanied by profound α-synuclein oligomer aggregation and neurotransmitter imbalances in the hippocampus, along with hippocampus-dependent cognitive deficits. These events were not observed 18 weeks after propofol exposure with or without surgical stress. The pharmacological induction of autophagy using rapamycin markedly suppressed α-synuclein oligomerization, restored neurotransmitter equilibrium, and improved cognitive behavior after prolonged anesthesia or anesthesia combined with surgery. Thus, both prolonged propofol anesthesia alone and propofol anesthesia during surgery impaired autophagy, which may have induced abnormal hippocampal α-synuclein aggregation and neurobehavioral deficits in aged rats. These findings suggest that the activation of autophagy and the clearance of pathological α-synuclein oligomers may be novel strategies to ameliorate the common occurrence of postoperative cognitive dysfunction.

Highlights

  • Postoperative cognitive dysfunction (POCD) is a decline in a patient’s cognitive function after a surgery [1], and is most prevalent in the elderly [2]

  • These results demonstrate that a longer period of propofol anesthesia (4 h) was more likely than a shorter period of anesthesia (2 h) to impair learning and memory behaviors in aged rats

  • We explored the relationship of autophagy to anesthesia/surgery-induced early cognitive dysfunction and α-synuclein oligomerization in vivo

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Summary

Introduction

Postoperative cognitive dysfunction (POCD) is a decline in a patient’s cognitive function after a surgery [1], and is most prevalent in the elderly [2]. Approximately 12% of older adults exhibited cognitive dysfunction for at least three months following surgery [2]. Little is known about the relationship between autophagy and POCD, impaired autophagy following sevoflurane anesthesia was found to induce cognitive dysfunction in aged rats [5]. We found that propofol anesthesia alone for 4 h significantly hampered cognitive performance by inhibiting hippocampal autophagy [7]. Propofol-induced POCD has been poorly characterized, and it is not known whether impaired autophagy contributes to POCD when propofol anesthesia is combined with surgery

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