Possible association of alcohol tolerance with increased synaptic Ca2+ sensitivity.
The inhibitory effect of ethanol on neurotransmitter release has been suggested to be due to either reduced Ca2+ entry or increased removal of free intracellular Ca2+ from the synapse. The use of the Ca2+ ionophore, A23187, to allow direct access of external Ca2+ to the presynaptic interior should help to determine which of these two factors is the more important, as ethanol should inhibit A23187-induced release of transmitter only if increased Ca2+ removal from the synapse is important. Here we show in rat striatal slices that, although 3H-dopamine release evoked by depolarization with 40 mM K+ is inhibited by 50 mM ethanol, the release evoked by A23187 is enhanced by the presence of ethanol in vitro. The results suggest that ethanol reduces depolarization-induced transmitter release by reducing Ca2+ entry to the presynaptic terminal. However, for brain slices taken from rats made tolerant to ethanol, 3H-dopamine release in the absence of ethanol showed altered characteristics; both K+ depolarization and A23187 released a significantly greater fraction of 3H-dopamine from these slices than from controls. Thus tolerance to the inhibitory effect of ethanol on release may develop by a mechanism involving increased sensitivity of the terminal to Ca2+ entry.[1]References
- Possible association of alcohol tolerance with increased synaptic Ca2+ sensitivity. Lynch, M.A., Littleton, J.M. Nature (1983) [Pubmed]
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