%0 Journal Article %A Roman M. Lazarenko %A Michal G. Fortuna %A Yingtang Shi %A Daniel K. Mulkey %A Ana C. Takakura %A Thiago S. Moreira %A Patrice G. Guyenet %A Douglas A. Bayliss %T Anesthetic Activation of Central Respiratory Chemoreceptor Neurons Involves Inhibition of a THIK-1-Like Background K+ Current %D 2010 %R 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1956-10.2010 %J The Journal of Neuroscience %P 9324-9334 %V 30 %N 27 %X At surgical depths of anesthesia, inhalational anesthetics cause a loss of motor response to painful stimuli (i.e., immobilization) that is characterized by profound inhibition of spinal motor circuits. Yet, although clearly depressed, the respiratory motor system continues to provide adequate ventilation under these same conditions. Here, we show that isoflurane causes robust activation of CO2/pH-sensitive, Phox2b-expressing neurons located in the retrotrapezoid nucleus (RTN) of the rodent brainstem, in vitro and in vivo. In brainstem slices from Phox2b–eGFP mice, the firing of pH-sensitive RTN neurons was strongly increased by isoflurane, independent of prevailing pH conditions. At least two ionic mechanisms contributed to anesthetic activation of RTN neurons: activation of an Na+-dependent cationic current and inhibition of a background K+ current. Single-cell reverse transcription-PCR analysis of dissociated green fluorescent protein-labeled RTN neurons revealed expression of THIK-1 (TWIK-related halothane-inhibited K+ channel, K2P13.1), a channel that shares key properties with the native RTN current (i.e., suppression by inhalational anesthetics, weak rectification, inhibition by extracellular Na+, and pH-insensitivity). Isoflurane also increased firing rate of RTN chemosensitive neurons in urethane-anesthetized rats, again independent of CO2 levels. In these animals, isoflurane transiently enhanced activity of the respiratory system, an effect that was most prominent at low levels of respiratory drive and mediated primarily by an increase in respiratory frequency. These data indicate that inhalational anesthetics cause activation of RTN neurons, which serve an important integrative role in respiratory control; the increased drive provided by enhanced RTN neuronal activity may contribute, in part, to maintaining respiratory motor activity under immobilizing anesthetic conditions. %U https://www.jneurosci.org/content/jneuro/30/27/9324.full.pdf