| Literature DB >> 32143280 |
Yanchao Jiang1, Ting Zhang1, Praveen Kusumanchi1, Sen Han1, Zhihong Yang1, Suthat Liangpunsakul1,2.
Abstract
Once ingested, most of the alcohol is metabolized in the liver by alcohol dehydrogenase to acetaldehyde. Two additional pathways of acetaldehyde generation are by microsomal ethanol oxidizing system (cytochrome P450 2E1) and catalase. Acetaldehyde can form adducts which can interfere with cellular function, leading to alcohol-induced liver injury. The variants of alcohol metabolizing genes encode enzymes with varied kinetic properties and result in the different rate of alcohol elimination and acetaldehyde generation. Allelic variants of these genes with higher enzymatic activity are believed to be able to modify susceptibility to alcohol-induced liver injury; however, the human studies on the association of these variants and alcohol-associated liver disease are inconclusive. In addition to acetaldehyde, the shift in the redox state during alcohol elimination may also link to other pathways resulting in activation of downstream signaling leading to liver injury.Entities:
Keywords: alcohol metabolizing enzyme; and alcohol-associated liver disease; cytochrome P450 2E1
Year: 2020 PMID: 32143280 PMCID: PMC7148483 DOI: 10.3390/biomedicines8030050
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomedicines ISSN: 2227-9059
Figure 1The major pathways of acetaldehyde formation after alcohol ingestion, alcohol dehydrogenase (ADH), cytochrome P450 2E1 (CYP2E1), catalase, and aldehyde dehydrogenase (ALDH) are demonstrated with their cofactors, and substrates.
The kinetic properties of each ADH class, population, and tissue distribution [23,29].
| Gene Locus | Subunit | Km for Ethanol (mM) | Vmax (min−1) | Major Ethnicity | Tissue Distribution |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Class I | |||||
|
| β1 | 0.05 | 54 | Caucasians, African-Americans | Liver, lung |
|
| β2 | 0.9 | - | Asians | |
|
| β2 | 34 | - | African-Americans | |
|
| γ1 | 1 | - | All groups | Liver, stomach |
|
| γ2 | 0.63 | - | Caucasians | |
| Class II: | π | 34 | 40 | Liver | |
| Class III: | χ | 1000 | - | Ubiquitous | |
| Class IV: | σ, µ | 20 | 1510 | Stomach and esophagus |
“-“: no data available.
Km for acetaldehyde and tissue distribution of human aldehyde dehydrogenase (ALDH) [23,29].
| Gene Locus | Km for Acetaldehyde | Tissue Distribution |
|---|---|---|
| Class I ALDH1 | 30 µM | Liver and many other tissues |
| Class II ALDH2 | <1 µM | Low levels in most tissues with the expression highest in liver compared to kidney and muscle |
| Class III ALDH3 | 11 mM | Stomach, liver, cornea |