Ready for the New Year's Eve buzz? Here's how your body gets intoxicated

The researchers said that alcohol in beverages acts much like an anesthetic.

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WASHINGTON: As New Year's Eve approaches, many people will experience the familiar buzz by consuming their favourite cocktail, and now researchers have revealed a twist in how this intoxication happens.

When the cocktail reaches our nerve cells, the alcohol employs intermediary molecules on the membrane surface of the neuron to produce the intoxicating effect, said researchers from the Scripps Research Institute (TSRI) in the US.

In the study published in the Journal of Molecular Biology, the researchers enabled fruit flies to become inebriated to track ethanol's path.


The fly is a useful model to study gene activity because its genome is smaller than other animals and is easily manipulated.
Party Starter

The alcohol in beverages acts much like an anesthetic, said Scott Hansen, an associate professor at TSRI.

It creates a hyper "buzzed" feeling first, and then sedation, Hansen said.
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It turns out there is an important intermediate step that was not previously known, researchers said.

They looked towards a system they have seen at play in anaesthesia to track alcohol's effects, starting with an enzyme on nerve cell membranes called phospholipase D2, (PLD2).

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The enzyme links ethanol molecules to lipid (fat) in the membrane of the nerve cell.

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The researchers found the enzyme becomes a catalyst triggering multiple downstream activities within the cell.

It creates a fatty alcohol metabolite called phosphatidylethanol (PEtOH).

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That metabolite builds up and causes nerves to fire more easily, resulting in more hyperactive flies.

"With hyperactivity you see the flies run around more, and this is what we equate to being buzzed," Hansen said.

When the scientists knocked out the gene for the enzyme that makes the PEtOH metabolite, thus eliminating the signal, the flies did not become more active.

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This is the first time this pathway has been identified as a determinant of alcohol sensitivity, Hansen said.

It remains to be seen whether the metabolite is involved in the full sedation experienced by the flies after the initial buzz and how this pathway may play a role in the hangover that many people experience later on.

Hansen says that his current research is addressing these questions.

Knowing alcohol's molecular targets could enable development of an antidote to intoxication, or even hangover, Hansen said.

"The fatty alcohol is known to linger in the brain for more than 16 hours making it a likely target," Hansen said.

"Also, understanding this pathway could give insight as to why people use alcohol for pain management," he said.

House Party? Try These Simple And Delicious Cocktail Recipes
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Red, white or sparkling, wine in every form is to be loved. Those with a taste for wine know just how delightful the beverage is. From the flavour to the effect, one simply can’t stop at a glass of this delight. However, there is always room for improvement; you can play with the flavours, add a few ingredients and prepare a wine cocktail.

All you need is wine and a few ingredients to whip up a cocktail good enough to blow your mind.

(Recipes courtesy: Grover Zampa)

Red, white or sparkling, wine in every form is to be loved. Those with a taste for wine know just how delightful the beverage is. From the flavour to the effect, one simply can’t stop at a glass of t..
Read More

Ingredients

Grover Art Collection Sauvignon Blanc: 90 ml

Dark rum: 30 ml

Vanilla extract: 10 ml

Pineapple juice: 10 ml

Method

- Add all ingredients in a cocktail shaker and mix for 10 seconds

- Take a highball glass and fill it with ice

- Strain the drink over ice

- Squeeze a lime over it and empty cocktail in the glass

IngredientsGrover Art Collection Sauvignon Blanc: 90 mlDark rum: 30 mlVanilla extract: 10 mlPineapple juice: 10 mlMethod- Add all ingredients in a cocktail shaker and mix for 10 seconds- Take a highb..
Read More

Ingredients

Grover Art Collection Chenin Blanc: 60 ml

Zampa Soirée Brut: 60 ml

Lemon juice: 10 ml

Vodka: 30 ml

Sugar syrup

Grapes for garnish

Method

- Mix all ingredients

- Set aside for an hour

- Garnish with grapes

- Serve chilled

IngredientsGrover Art Collection Chenin Blanc: 60 mlZampa Soirée Brut: 60 mlLemon juice: 10 mlVodka: 30 mlSugar syrupGrapes for garnishMethod- Mix all ingredients- Set aside for an hour- Garnish with..
Read More

Ingredients

Grover Art Collection Rosé: 90ml

Gin: 30 ml

Strawberry puree

Lime juice and syrup

Method

- Mix all the ingredients in a shaker

- Serve in highball glass

IngredientsGrover Art Collection Rosé: 90mlGin: 30 mlStrawberry pureeLime juice and syrupMethod- Mix all the ingredients in a shaker- Serve in highball glass

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