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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 

Repeated whiskey binges promote liver injury in rats fed a choline-deficient diet.

BACKGROUND/AIMS: Alcoholic liver disease is associated with nutritional deficiency and it may aggravate within the context of fatty liver. We investigated the relationship between alcohol intake (whiskey binge drinking) and a choline-deficient diet (CD) and assessed whether stellate cells could contribute to liver injury in this model. RESULTS: Rats fed the CD diet plus whiskey showed increased liver damage compared to rats fed the CD diet, as demonstrated by H&E staining, elevated transaminases, steatosis, TNF-alpha levels, enhanced CYP2E1 activity, impaired antioxidant defense, elevated lipid peroxidation, and protein carbonyls. The combined treatment triggered an apoptotic response as determined by elevated Bax, caspase-3 activity, cytochrome-c release, and decreased Bcl-2 and Bcl-X(L). Stellate cells were activated as increased expression of alpha-Sma was observed over that by the CD diet alone. The combined treatment shifted extracellular matrix remodeling towards a pro-fibrogenic response due to up-regulation of collagen I, TIMP1, and Hsp47 proteins, along with down-regulation of MMP13, MMP2, and MMP9 expression, proteases which degrade collagen I. These events were accompanied by increased phosphorylation of p38, a kinase that elevates collagen I. CONCLUSIONS: Repeated alcohol binges in the context of mild steatosis may promote activation of stellate cells and contribute to liver injury.[1]

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