Glutamate-mediated transmission, alcohol, and alcoholism
Data(s) |
01/01/2000
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Resumo |
Glutamate-mediated neurotransmission may be involved in the range of adaptive changes in brain which occur after ethanol administration in laboratory animals, and in chronic alcoholism in human cases. Excitatory amino acid transmission is modulated by a complex system of receptors and other effecters, the efficacy of which can be profoundly affected by altered gene or protein expression. Local variations in receptor composition may underlie intrinsic regional variations in susceptibility to pathological change. Equally, ethanol use and abuse may bring about alterations in receptor subunit expression as the essence of the adaptive response. Such considerations may underlie the regional localization characteristic of the pathogenesis of alcoholic brain damage, or they may form part of the homeostatic change that constitutes the neural substrate for alcohol dependence. (C) 2000 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved. |
Identificador | |
Idioma(s) |
eng |
Palavras-Chave | #Biochemistry & Molecular Biology #Neurosciences #Ethanol #Pathogenesis #Dependency #Excitatory Amino Acid #Receptors-subunits #Treatment Of Dependency #Drug Mechanisms #Review #Methyl-d-aspartate #Chronic Ethanol Treatment #Nmda Receptor Subunit #Amino-acid Receptors #Cultured Cortical-neurons #Cerebellar Granule Cells #H-3 Mk-801 Binding #Brain Synaptic-membranes #Rat Cerebral-cortex #Ion-channel Complex |
Tipo |
Journal Article |