Anesthetic preconditioning occurs when cells previously exposed to inhaled anesthetics are protected against subsequent injury. We hypothesize that inhaled anesthetics may cause slight protein misfolding that involves site-specific dehydration, stimulating cytoprotective mechanisms. Human neuroblastoma cells were exposed to ethanol (as the dehydration agent) followed by quantitative analysis of the expression of five heat shock genes: DNAJC5G, CRYAA, HSPB2, HSF4 and HSF2. There was an ethanol-induced upregulation of all genes except HSF4, similar to previous observations using isoflurane. CRYAA (the gene for alphaA-crystallin) exhibited a 23.19 and 17.15-fold increase at 24 and 48 h post ethanol exposure, respectively. Additionally, we exposed glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase to ethanol, which altered oligomeric subspecies and caused protein aggregation in a concentration-dependent manner. Ethanol-mediated dehydration-induced protein aggregation was prevented by incubation with alpha-crystallin. These data indicate that ethanol mimics the effects of isoflurane presumably through a cellular preconditioning mechanism that involves dehydration-induced protein aggregation.