| Literature DB >> 28082989 |
Abstract
Bidirectional communication links operate between the brain and the body. Afferent immune-to-brain signals are capable of inducing changes in mood and behavior. Chronic heavy alcohol drinking, typical of alcohol use disorder (AUD), is one such factor that provokes an immune response in the periphery that, by means of circulatory cytokines and other neuroimmune mediators, ultimately causes alterations in the brain function. Alcohol can also directly impact the immune functions of microglia, the resident immune cells of the central nervous system (CNS). Several lines of research have established the contribution of specific inflammatory mediators in the development and progression of depressive illness. Much of the available evidence in this field stems from cross-sectional data on the immune interactions between isolated AUD and major depression (MD). Given their heterogeneity as disease entities with overlapping symptoms and shared neuroimmune correlates, it is no surprise that systemic and CNS inflammation could be a critical determinant of the frequent comorbidity between AUD and MD. This review presents a summary and analysis of the extant literature on neuroimmune interface in the AUD-MD comorbidity.Entities:
Keywords: alcohol drinking; alcohol use disorder; comorbidity; cytokines; depression; neuroimmune interface; neuroinflammation
Year: 2016 PMID: 28082989 PMCID: PMC5186784 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2016.00655
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1Alcohol modulation of the innate immune response .
Figure 2Simplified pathways illustrating the potential mechanisms that underlie associations between alcohol use disorder (AUD) and major depression (MD), with a compelling neuroimmune contribution. Heavy alcohol drinking may render gut wall permeable to bacterial proteins such as lipopolysaccharide (LPS) through the activation of toll-like receptors. Ethanol and LPS upregulate the transcription factor NF-κB and cause immune cells in the periphery as well as glial cells to produce pro-inflammatory cytokines. The pro-inflammatory cytokines within the brain activate the indolamine 2,3-dioxygenase enzyme, which metabolizes tryptophan away from serotonin production toward a potentially neurotoxic kynurenine pathway. MD accompanies altered monoamines, oxidative and nitrosative damage, and neurodegeneration. Depression is associated with chronic inflammatory conditions such as cancer and cardiovascular diseases, which together with sickness symptoms can feed the neuroimmune dysregulation causing further neurodegeneration, negative affect, and anxiety-like behavior and loss of behavioral control—all features characterized in AUD.
Overview of studies investigating neuroimmune pathways in comorbid alcohol use disorder (AUD) and depression.
| Reference, country | Subjects | Studied pathway/parameter | Main findings |
|---|---|---|---|
| Han et al. ( | 45 male inpatients with alcohol dependence | Growth factors | Depression score in AUD patients correlated positively with insulin-like growth factor, but not with nerve growth factor or BDNF |
| Plemenitaš et al. ( | 101 alcohol abusing and 100 previously alcohol-dependent male inpatients abstinent for ≥2 years | Tryptophan metabolism; genetic association study | Genetic variability in tryptophan hydroxylase 2 (TPH2) gene associated with anxiety and, to some extent, with depression. TPH2 rs1843809 was associated with depressive and aggressive traits and TPH2 rs4290270 with depressive and anxiety traits |
| Neupane et al. ( | 153 male and 16 female AUD inpatients | Tryptophan metabolism | Concurrent depressive state related to counterintuitive higher tryptophan level and lower tryptophan degradation index. Tryptophan metabolism related to abstinence duration and AUD severity |
| Neupane et al. ( | 152 male AUD inpatients | BDNF | Concurrent depressive state in AUD related to lower BDNF serum levels. Among patients in controlled abstinence, history of binge drinking, and severe AUD associated with higher BDNF serum levels. Tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-α) correlated with BDNF levels |
| Neupane et al. ( | 156 male and 20 female AUD inpatients | Cytokines | Higher serum levels of inflammatory cytokines [interleukin (IL)-6, TNF-α, IFN-γ], but not IL-10 among comorbid major depression (MD) group. Cytokine levels less increased in depression comorbid with greater severity of AUD than less severe AUD |
| Nedic et al. ( | 549 male and 126 female patients with alcohol dependence | BDNF; genetic association study | BDNF Val66Met polymorphism not related to depression in alcohol dependence |
| Su et al. ( | 548 male Han Chinese with alcohol dependence | BDNF; genetic association study | The A allele of BDNF rs6265 was significantly overrepresented in alcohol-dependent patients with depression compared to patients with isolated alcohol dependence |
| Umene-Nakano et al. ( | 13 male and 6 female inpatients with MD and alcohol dependence | BDNF | No significant difference was found in the serum BDNF levels of depressive patients with and without alcohol dependence. BDNF levels increased among responders to antidepressant medication (8 weeks), but not among non-responders |
BDNF, brain-derived neurotrophic factor.