The consequences of the drug-triggered cues from nucleus to cytosol in the restoration of intracellular organelles, cell structure, and function were investigated. The synthesis of the ER-assembled transporters in the cytosol, primed by incubation with nuclei in the presence of ethanol, was manifested by a 26% decrease in the assembly of cell organelle-restoring vesicles, 30% decline in the transport of basolateral cargo, and a 34% amplification in production of the vesicles retained by endosomes. The disparity in the assembly of the Golgi organelle-, cell membrane-, and endosome-directed transporters was in the concurrence with the weakened potential of Golgi-membrane glycosyltransferases and sphingomyelin synthase, amplified acidic sphingomyelinase, and the increased apoptosis. Inadvertently, the composition of the vesicular cohort arriving to Golgi was dictated by ethanol-induced cues released from nuclei to the cytosol that from the outset produced in ER the core assemblies unlike controls.