Barondes S H, Traynor M E, Schlapfer W T, Woodson P B
Drug Alcohol Depend. 1979 Jan-Mar;4(1-2):155-66. doi: 10.1016/0376-8716(79)90061-9.
There is increasing evidence that ethanol exerts its primary effect at neuronal membranes by influencing specific lipid--protein or lipid--lipid interactions that control the state of organization of a specific membrane component; for example, a specific lipid--protein complex that controls a particular physiological property. This implies that tolerance to ethanol is the result of a change in the composition and/or state of organization of this critical membrane component. This altered state confers ethanol resistance. It may or may not have an effect on function in the absence of ethanol. One basis for these speculations comes from experiments using a sensitive and specific neurophysiological assay -- the rate of decay of posttetanic potentiation (PTP) at an identified synapse in an isolated, perfused Aplysia ganglion. We review evidence that PTP decay rate is strikingly accelerated by ethanol (a membrane-fluidizing agent) and strikingly decelerated below a transition temperature, presumably reflecting a transition in the structure of a membrane component. The ethanol and low-temperature effects are antagonistic. The system develops adaptation (tolerance) to either ethanol or low temperature within hours of its exposure. Tolerance persists for at least 12 hours, the longest interval tested thus far. In the absence of ethanol and at normal temperature the system behaves normally, that is it shows no "physical dependence". The system also has the remarkable property that when it becomes tolerant to either of these treatments, it shows tolerance to the other treatment that normally has the opposite effect. Therefore, the adaptation to either treatment cannot be a simple change in membrane composition governing overall membrane fluidity. A hypothesis which could explain the bidirectional cross-tolerance is considered in which adaptation to both treatments involves a shift from a homogeneous to a more heterogeneous composition of the critical membrane component, for example increasing heterogeneity in boundary lipid surrounding a critical membrane protein. It is becoming increasingly clear that ethanol exerts its primary effect by altering cell membrane structure -- by "fluidizing" or expanding neuronal and other membranes [1 - 6]. This effect results when ethanol, a somewhat hydrophobic molecule, intercalates between some fatty acid chains of membranes, reducing the degree of order of their alignment and increasing the lateral mobility of some membrane components. Decrease in the order of the fatty acid chains results in a measurable expansion of the membrane; and the change in fluidity is reflected in the change in mobility of appropriate probes that can be dissolved in the membrane [6, 7]. It is presumed that the physiological effects of ethanol are consequences of its fluidization of some critical membrane components; and that tolerance to ethanol is based on some form of resistance to this fluidization...
越来越多的证据表明,乙醇通过影响特定的脂质 - 蛋白质或脂质 - 脂质相互作用,在神经元膜上发挥其主要作用,这些相互作用控制着特定膜成分的组织状态;例如,一种控制特定生理特性的特定脂质 - 蛋白质复合物。这意味着对乙醇的耐受性是这种关键膜成分的组成和/或组织状态发生变化的结果。这种改变的状态赋予了对乙醇的抗性。在没有乙醇的情况下,它可能对功能有影响,也可能没有影响。这些推测的一个依据来自使用一种灵敏且特异的神经生理学检测方法的实验——在分离的、灌注的海兔神经节中一个已确定的突触处强直后增强(PTP)的衰减速率。我们回顾了相关证据,即乙醇(一种膜流化剂)会显著加速PTP衰减速率,而在一个转变温度以下则会显著减慢,这大概反映了膜成分结构的转变。乙醇和低温的影响是拮抗的。该系统在暴露于乙醇或低温后的数小时内就会产生适应性(耐受性)。耐受性至少持续12小时,这是迄今为止测试的最长时间间隔。在没有乙醇且处于正常温度下,该系统表现正常,也就是说它没有“身体依赖性”。该系统还具有一个显著特性,即当它对这两种处理中的任何一种产生耐受性时,它对通常具有相反效果的另一种处理也表现出耐受性。因此,对任何一种处理的适应性都不可能是控制整体膜流动性的膜组成的简单变化。本文考虑了一个可以解释双向交叉耐受性的假说,即对两种处理的适应性都涉及关键膜成分从均匀组成向更不均匀组成的转变,例如关键膜蛋白周围边界脂质的不均匀性增加。越来越清楚的是,乙醇通过改变细胞膜结构——通过“流化”或扩张神经元膜和其他膜来发挥其主要作用[1 - 6]。当乙醇这种有点疏水的分子插入膜的一些脂肪酸链之间,降低其排列的有序程度并增加一些膜成分的横向流动性时,就会产生这种效果。脂肪酸链有序程度的降低导致膜有可测量的扩张;流动性的变化反映在可溶解于膜中的合适探针的流动性变化上[6, 7]。据推测,乙醇的生理效应是其对一些关键膜成分流化的结果;而对乙醇的耐受性是基于对这种流化的某种形式的抗性……