Caffeine, the stimulant in coffee, has been called "the most widely used psychoactive substance on Earth. "Snyder, Daly, and Bruns have recently proposed that caffeine affects brain of by countering the activity in the human brain of a naturally occurring chemical called adenosine. Adenosine normally depresses neuron firing in many areas of the brain. It apparently does this by inhibiting the release of neurotransmitters, chemicals that carry nerve impulses from one neuron to the next.
Like many other agents that affect neuron firing, adenosine must first bind to specific receptors on neuronal membranes. There are at least two classes of these receptors, which have been designated A1 and A2. Snyder et a1. propose that caffeine, which is structurally similar to adenosine, is able to bind to both types of receptors, which prevents adenosine from attaching there and allows the neurons to fire more readily than they otherwise would.
For many years, caffeine's effects have been attributed to its inhibition of the production of phosphodiesterase, an enzyme that breaks down the chemical called cyclic AMR. A number of neurotransmitters exert their effects by first increasing cyclic AM P concentrations in target neurons. Therefore, prolonged periods at the elevated concentrations, as might be brought about by a phosphodiesterase inhibitor, could lead to a greater amount of neuron firing and, consequently, to behavioral stimulation. But Snyder et aI point out that the caffeine concentrations needed to inhibit the production of phosphodiesterase in the brain are much higher than those that produce stimulation. Moreover, other compounds that block phosphodiesterase's activity are not stimulants.
To buttress their case that caffeine acts instead by preventing adenosine binding, Snyder et al compared the stimulatory effects of a series of caffeine derivatives with their ability to dislodge adenosine from its receptors in the brains of mice. "In general,"they reported "the ability of the compounds to compete at the receptors correlates with their ability to stimulate locomotion in the mouse i. e., the higher their capacity to bind at the receptors, the higher their ability to stimulate locomotion." Theophylline, a close structural relative of the most effective compounds in both regards.
There were some apparent exceptions to the general correlation observed between adenosine-receptor binding and stimulation. One of these was a compound called 3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine (IBMX), which bound very well but actually depressed mouse locomotion. Snyder et al suggest that this is not a major stumbling block to their hypothesis. The problem is that the compound has mixed effects in the brain, a not unusual occurrence with psychoactive drugs. Even Caffeine, which is generally known only for its stimulatory effects, displays this property, depressing mouse locomotion at very low concentrations and stimulating it at higher ones.
The primary purpose of the passage is to
discuss a plan for investigation of a phenomenon that is not yet fully understood
present two explanations of a phenomenon and reconcile the differences between them
summarize two theories and suggest a third theory that overcomes the problems encountered in the first two
describe an alternative hypothesis and provide evidence and arguments that support it
challenge the validity of a theory by exposing the inconsistencies and contradictions in it
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正确答案是 D。该文章主要用来描述一个另外的假设并提出相关的证据和推论,以此来取代原有的理论。文中指出咖啡因是一种刺激物,其影响大脑的作用方式主要是通过抑制人体大脑内自然存在的化学物质——腺苷。腺苷通过抑制大脑不同部位神经元的放电,以达到调控大脑状态的作用。而 Snyder 等人指出,咖啡因的调控效应不是通过抑制磷酸二酯酶的形成而起的,而是当它结合到人体大脑的 A1 和 A2 型酯酶时,它可以阻止腺苷结合到 A1 和 A2 型受体上,因此它能够加快神经元的放电。文章进一步通过许多的实验来证明这一另外的假设,表明咖啡因的刺激效应是通过阻止腺苷结合到神经元受体上而起的。
文章 首先说的是 咖啡因简单地和受体结合导致的
然后引出了一个新的方法its inhibition of the production of phosphodiesterase,