Abstract
Voltage-gated ion channels (VGICs) are responsible for the propagation of electrical signals in excitable cells. Small-molecule modulation of VGICs affects transmission of action potentials in neurons and thus can modulate the activity of the central nervous system. For this reason, VGICs are considered key players in the medically induced state of general anesthesia. Consistently, VGICs have been shown to respond to several general anesthetics. However, in spite of extensive electrophysiological characterizations, modulation of VGICs by anesthetics is still only partially understood. Among the challenging aspects are the presence of multiple binding sites and the observation of paradoxical effects, i.e., evidence, for the same channel, of inhibition and potentiation. In this context, molecular simulations emerged in the recent past as the tool of choice to complement electrophysiology studies with a microscopic picture of binding and allosteric regulation. In this chapter, we describe the most effective computational techniques to study VGIC modulation by general anesthetics. We start by reviewing the VGIC conduction cycle, the corresponding set of channel conformations, and the approaches used to model them. We then review the most successful strategies to identify binding sites and estimate binding affinities.
Published Version
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