Liquid general anesthetics lower critical temperatures in plasma membrane vesicles
Ellyn Gray, Joshua Karslake, Benjamin B. Machta, Sarah L. Veatch

TL;DR
This study shows that liquid general anesthetics lower the critical temperature of plasma membrane vesicles, potentially affecting membrane heterogeneity and providing insights into their mechanism of action.
Contribution
It demonstrates that anesthetics depress the critical temperature of GPMVs without altering phase ratios, linking membrane effects to anesthetic potency.
Findings
Anesthetics lower GPMV critical temperature by about 4°C at AC50.
The effect is consistent across n-alcohols when scaled by AC50.
Hydrophobic analogs without anesthetic potency do not lower Tc.
Abstract
A large and diverse array of small hydrophobic molecules induce general anesthesia. Their efficacy as anesthetics has been shown to correlate both with their affinity for a hydrophobic environment and with their potency in inhibiting certain ligand gated ion channels. Here we explore the effects that n-alcohols and other liquid anesthetics have on the two-dimensional miscibility critical point observed in cell derived giant plasma membrane vesicles (GPMVs). We show that anesthetics depress the critical temperature (Tc) of these GPMVs without strongly altering the ratio of the two liquid phases found below Tc. The magnitude of this affect is consistent across n-alcohols when their concentration is rescaled by the median anesthetic concentration (AC50) for tadpole anesthesia, but not when plotted against the overall concentration in solution. At AC50 we see a 4{\deg}C downward shift in…
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