Literature DB >> 21349883

Acetate-dependent mechanisms of inborn tolerance to ethanol.

Sergey M Zimatkin1, Nikolay A Oganesian, Yury V Kiselevski, Richard A Deitrich.   

Abstract

AIMS: To clarify the role of acetate in neurochemical mechanisms of the initial (inborn) tolerance to ethanol.
METHODS: Rats with low and high inborn tolerance to hypnotic effect of ethanol were used. In the brain region homogenates (frontal and parietal cortex, hypothalamus, striatum, medulla oblongata) and brain cortex synaptosomes, the levels of acetate, acetyl-CoA, acetylcholine (AcH), the activity of pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDG) and acetyl-CoA synthetase were examined.
RESULTS: It has been found that brain cortex of rats with high tolerance to hypnotic effect of ethanol have higher level of acetate and activity of acetyl-CoA synthetase, but lower level of acetyl-СCoA and activity of PDG. In brain cortex synaptosomes of tolerant rats, the pyruvate oxidation rate as well as the content of acetyl-CoA and AcH synthesis were lower when compared with intolerant animals. The addition of acetate into the medium significantly increased the AcH synthesis in synaptosomes of tolerant, but not of intolerant animals. Calcium ions stimulated the AcH release from synaptosomes twice as high in tolerant as in intolerant animals. Acetate eliminated the stimulating effect of calcium ions upon the release of AcH in synaptosomes of intolerant rats, but not in tolerant animals. As a result, the quantum release of AcH from synaptosomes in the presence of acetate was 6.5 times higher in tolerant when compared with intolerant rats.
CONCLUSION: The brain cortex of rats with high inborn tolerance to hypnotic effect of ethanol can better utilize acetate for the acetyl-CoA and AcH synthesis, as well as being resistant to inhibitory effect of acetate to calcium-stimulated release of AcH. It indicates the metabolic and cholinergic mechanisms of the initial tolerance to ethanol.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21349883      PMCID: PMC3114548          DOI: 10.1093/alcalc/agr014

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Alcohol Alcohol        ISSN: 0735-0414            Impact factor:   2.826


  36 in total

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2.  Origin of the acetyl moiety of acetylcholine synthesized in rat striatal synaptosomes.

Authors:  P Lefresne; M Hamon; J C Beaujouan; J Glowinski
Journal:  Biochimie       Date:  1977       Impact factor: 4.079

3.  The effect of (-)hydroxycitrate on pyruvate metabolism in rat brain synaptosomes.

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5.  Rapid uptake of (I- 14 C) acetate by the adult rat brain 15 seconds after carotid injection.

Authors:  G A Dhopeshwarkar; C Subramanian; J F Mead
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8.  Utilization of citrate, acetylcarnitine, acetate, pyruvate and glucose for the synthesis of acetylcholine in rat brain slices.

Authors:  V Dolezal; S Tucek
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9.  Acetate metabolism in brain mechanisms of adaptation to ethanol.

Authors:  Yuri Kiselevski; Nicholas Oganesian; Sergey Zimatkin; Andrzej Szutowicz; Stefan Angielski; Pavel Niezabitowski; Wojciech Uracz; Ryszard J Gryglewski
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10.  Open field locomotor effects in rats after intraventricular injections of ethanol and the ethanol metabolites acetaldehyde and acetate.

Authors:  M Correa; M N Arizzi; A Betz; S Mingote; J D Salamone
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Review 4.  The Regulatory Effects of Acetyl-CoA Distribution in the Healthy and Diseased Brain.

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5.  Acetate as an active metabolite of ethanol: studies of locomotion, loss of righting reflex, and anxiety in rodents.

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