Gustavsson L
Department of Psychiatry and Neurochemistry, University of Lund, Sweden.
Alcohol Alcohol. 1995 Jul;30(4):391-406.
Phosphatidylethanol is a unique phospholipid which is formed in cell membranes only in the presence of ethanol. The reaction is catalysed by phospholipase D, an enzyme that normally catalyses the hydrolysis of phospholipids leading to the formation of phosphatidic acid. However, phospholipase D also utilizes short-chain alcohols as substrates resulting in the formation of the corresponding phosphatidylalcohol. This is a specific mechanism through which ethanol may interact with cell function. Phospholipase D is activated by several different receptors and has during recent years been suggested to play a role in cellular signalling. Secretory processes as well as long-term changes of cell function have been associated with the activation of phospholipase D. Since ethanol competes with water as a substrate for this enzyme, phosphatidylethanol is formed at the expense of the normal lipid product, phosphatidic acid, in an ethanol concentration-dependent manner. Therefore, the phospholipase D-mediated signal transduction diverges from production of the normal signalling lipid in the presence of ethanol. However, phosphatidic acid may also be formed by other pathways and their relative contribution to the formation of this lipid depends on the cell and receptor type. Thus, it is important to identify the signalling systems where phospholipase D dominates the lipid messenger production since these may be especially vulnerable to ethanol. In addition to a change in phospholipase D-mediated signal transduction, accumulation of phosphatidylethanol in cell membranes may also induce disturbances in cell function. Significant amounts of this abnormal phospholipid have been detected after ethanol exposure in brain and other organs from rat, in cultured cells as well as in human blood cells. The degradation of phosphatidylethanol is relatively slow and it remains in the cells after ethanol has disappeared. It is possible that an abnormal phospholipid that accumulates in cell membranes affects membrane-associated processes. Phosphatidylethanol is a lipid with a small, anionic head group and its biophysical properties are different compared with other phospholipids. Moreover, this lipid has been demonstrated to influence membrane characteristics, enzyme activities and levels of signalling molecules. Thus, both the inhibition of phospholipase D-mediated signal transduction and the accumulation of phosphatidylethanol represent possible pathways through which ethanol may disturb cell function.
磷脂酰乙醇是一种独特的磷脂,只有在乙醇存在的情况下才会在细胞膜中形成。该反应由磷脂酶D催化,磷脂酶D是一种通常催化磷脂水解生成磷脂酸的酶。然而,磷脂酶D也利用短链醇作为底物,从而生成相应的磷脂醇。这是乙醇可能与细胞功能相互作用的一种特定机制。磷脂酶D被几种不同的受体激活,近年来有人提出它在细胞信号传导中发挥作用。分泌过程以及细胞功能的长期变化都与磷脂酶D的激活有关。由于乙醇作为该酶的底物与水竞争,磷脂酰乙醇以磷脂酸这种正常脂质产物为代价,以乙醇浓度依赖的方式形成。因此,在乙醇存在的情况下,磷脂酶D介导的信号转导偏离了正常信号脂质的产生。然而,磷脂酸也可能通过其他途径形成,它们对这种脂质形成的相对贡献取决于细胞和受体类型。因此,识别磷脂酶D在脂质信使产生中占主导地位的信号系统很重要,因为这些系统可能对乙醇特别敏感。除了磷脂酶D介导的信号转导发生变化外,细胞膜中磷脂酰乙醇的积累也可能导致细胞功能紊乱。在大鼠的脑和其他器官、培养细胞以及人类血细胞中,乙醇暴露后已检测到大量这种异常磷脂。磷脂酰乙醇的降解相对较慢,在乙醇消失后它仍留在细胞中。有可能积累在细胞膜中的异常磷脂会影响与膜相关的过程。磷脂酰乙醇是一种带有小阴离子头部基团的脂质,其生物物理性质与其他磷脂不同。此外,这种脂质已被证明会影响膜特性、酶活性和信号分子水平。因此,磷脂酶D介导的信号转导的抑制和磷脂酰乙醇的积累都代表了乙醇可能干扰细胞功能的潜在途径。