Abstract

BackgroundPerioperative infections, particularly surgical site infections pose significant morbidity and mortality. Phagocytosis is a critical step for microbial eradication. We examined the effect of commonly used anesthetics on macrophage phagocytosis and its mechanism.MethodsThe effect of anesthetics (isoflurane, sevoflurane, propofol) on macrophage phagocytosis was tested using RAW264.7 mouse cells, mouse peritoneal macrophages, and THP-1 human cells. Either opsonized sheep erythrocytes or fluorescent labeled Escherichia coli were used as phagocytic objects. The activation of Rap1, a critical protein in phagocytosis was assessed using the active Rap1 pull-down and detection kit. To examine anesthetic binding site(s) on Rap1, photolabeling experiments were performed using azi-isoflurane and azi-sevoflurane. The alanine scanning mutagenesis of Rap1 was performed to assess the role of anesthetic binding site in Rap1 activation and phagocytosis.ResultsMacrophage phagocytosis was significantly attenuated by the exposure of isoflurane (50% reduction by 1% isoflurane) and sevoflurane (50% reduction by 1.5% sevoflurane), but not by propofol. Photolabeling experiments showed that sevoflurane directly bound to Rap1. Mutagenesis analysis demonstrated that the sevoflurane binding site affected Rap1 activation and macrophage phagocytosis.ConclusionsWe showed that isoflurane and sevoflurane attenuated macrophage phagocytosis, but propofol did not. Our study showed for the first time that sevoflurane served as a novel small GTPase Rap1 inhibitor. The finding will further enrich our understanding of yet-to-be determined mechanism of volatile anesthetics and their off-target effects. The sevoflurane binding site was located outside the known Rap1 functional sites, indicating the discovery of a new functional site on Rap1 and this site would serve as a pocket for the development of novel Rap1 inhibitors.

Highlights

  • Emerging evidences suggest that surgical anesthetics possess immunomodulatory effects [1,2,3]

  • Macrophage phagocytosis was significantly attenuated by the exposure of isoflurane (50% reduction by 1% isoflurane) and sevoflurane (50% reduction by 1.5% sevoflurane), but not by propofol

  • We showed that isoflurane and sevoflurane attenuated macrophage phagocytosis, but propofol did not

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Summary

Introduction

Emerging evidences suggest that surgical anesthetics possess immunomodulatory effects [1,2,3]. General anesthesia is mainly provided by intravenous and/or volatile anesthetics. The majority of sedatives in the ICU are intravenous medications. Volatile anesthetics are attracting attention as ICU sedatives due to their potentially favorable profiles for pulmonary gas exchange [4]. Perioperative infections, such as surgical site infections (SSIs), can result in significant morbidity, mortality, and financial burdens [5,6,7,8]. We examined the effect of commonly used anesthetics on macrophage phagocytosis and its mechanism

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