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Vol. 61, Issue 1, 169-176, January 2002
Unit on Cellular Neuropharmacology, Laboratory of Molecular and
Cellular Neurobiology, National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and
Alcoholism, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland
n-Alkanol inhibition of
N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptors
exhibits a "cutoff" effect: alcohols with up to eight to nine carbon atoms inhibit the receptor, whereas larger alcohols do not. This
phenomenon was originally proposed to result from size exclusion; i.e.,
alcohols above the cutoff are too large to bind to an amphiphilic site
on the receptor. In the present study, 1,
-diols with 3 to 14 carbon
atoms inhibited NMDA-activated current in Chinese hamster ovary and
human embryonic kidney 293 cells transiently expressing NR1 and NR2B
NMDA receptor subunits. Results of fluctuation analysis experiments
were consistent with a similar mechanism of inhibition of
NMDA-activated current by alcohols and diols. The average change in
apparent energy of binding of the diols caused by addition of a
methylene group was 2.1 kJ/mol, which is consistent with an important
role of hydrophobic interactions. Because 1,
-diols with 9 to 14 carbons inhibited NMDA-activated current, despite having molecular
volumes exceeding that at the cutoff point for 1-alkanols, a size
exclusion mechanism seems inadequate to explain the cutoff effect. A
disparity in hydrophobicity values at the cutoff for alcohols and
diols, however, revealed that hydrophobicity could also not entirely
explain the cutoff phenomenon. From these results, it seems that the
cutoff effect on NMDA receptors results primarily from the inability of
long-chain alcohols to achieve adequate concentrations at their site of
action due to low aqueous solubility, although other factors may also contribute to the effect.
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