Membrane fluidity and alcohol actions.

Currents in alcoholism Pub Date : 1981-01-01
R A Harris, R J Hitzemann
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Abstract

Many studies have demonstrated that the ability of alcohols and other intoxicant-anesthetics to affect biochemical, physiological, and behavioral processes rests in their hydrophobicity. This means that potency is determined by the ability of the drug to move from a water phase into a lipid or membrane phase. In more precise terms, anesthetic effects are correlated with the volume occupied by the anesthetic molecules within the membrane. Although the anesthetic effects, particularly the inhibition of nerve condition, have been used most frequently in establishing this correlation, the intoxicating effects (i.e., ataxia) of a series of alcohols had also been correlated with their membrane partitioning. These results suggest that the intoxicating, as well as anesthetic, effects of ethanol and related drugs are due to their penetrating into hydrophobic regions of nerve membranes. The predominant hydrophobic region of biological membranes is the "sea" of lipid that surrounds "islands" of functional proteins. This leads to the postulate that intoxicant-anesthetics alter the physical properties of membrane lipids and thus affect neuronal function. To evaluate this hypothesis, we must consider the lipid composition of brain membranes, the importance of membrane lipids in neuronal function, the techniques available for the study of membrane physical properties, and the effects of ethanol on nerve membranes.

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膜流动性和酒精作用。
许多研究表明,酒精和其他麻醉药物影响生物化学、生理和行为过程的能力取决于它们的疏水性。这意味着药效是由药物从水相进入脂质或膜相的能力决定的。更精确地说,麻醉效果与膜内麻醉分子所占的体积有关。尽管麻醉作用,特别是神经状况的抑制作用,在建立这种相关性时最常被使用,但一系列酒精的中毒作用(即共济失调)也与它们的膜分配有关。这些结果表明,乙醇和相关药物的中毒和麻醉作用是由于它们渗透到神经膜的疏水区域。生物膜的主要疏水区域是围绕着功能蛋白“岛”的脂质“海”。这导致了一种假设,即麻醉药物改变了膜脂的物理性质,从而影响了神经元的功能。为了评估这一假设,我们必须考虑脑膜的脂质组成,膜脂在神经元功能中的重要性,膜物理性质研究的可用技术,以及乙醇对神经膜的影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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Centrally acting peptides and tolerance to ethanol. New perspectives on the similarities and differences of alcoholism and drug abuse. The swift increase in alcohol metabolism. Membrane fluidity and alcohol actions. A model for service delivery research and evaluation: management implications for alcohol, drug abuse and mental health organizations.
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