Ethanol stimulates gamma-aminobutyric acid receptor-mediated chloride transport in rat brain synaptoneurosomes.

PD Suzdak, RD Schwartz… - Proceedings of the …, 1986 - National Acad Sciences
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1986National Acad Sciences
The effects of ethanol on Cl-uptake were studied using a cell-free subcellular preparation
from brain that contains a gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA)/barbiturate receptor-sensitive
Cl-transport system. In isolated vesicles prepared from rat cerebral cortex, ethanol, at
concentrations that are present during acute intoxication (20-50 mM), stimulated 36Cl-
uptake in a concentration-dependent and biphasic manner. The ethanol-stimulated uptake
of 36Cl-was markedly inhibited by the GABA antagonists picrotoxin and bicuculline but not …
The effects of ethanol on Cl- uptake were studied using a cell-free subcellular preparation from brain that contains a gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA)/barbiturate receptor-sensitive Cl- transport system. In isolated vesicles prepared from rat cerebral cortex, ethanol, at concentrations that are present during acute intoxication (20-50 mM), stimulated 36Cl- uptake in a concentration-dependent and biphasic manner. The ethanol-stimulated uptake of 36Cl- was markedly inhibited by the GABA antagonists picrotoxin and bicuculline but not by a variety of other neurotransmitter receptor antagonists. The effects of ethanol in stimulating 36Cl- uptake in isolated brain vesicles were qualitatively and quantitatively similar to that of pentobarbital. Ethanol also markedly potentiated both muscimol- and pentobarbital-stimulated 36Cl- uptake at concentrations below those that directly stimulate 36Cl- uptake. Under our incubation conditions, ethanol did not release GABA, suggesting that it interacts with the postsynaptic GABA/barbiturate receptor complex. The ability of ethanol to stimulate GABA/barbiturate receptor-mediated Cl- transport may explain many of its pharmacological properties and provides a mechanism for the common psychopharmacological actions of ethanol, barbiturates, and benzodiazepines.
National Acad Sciences