| Literature DB >> 35883865 |
Evangelia Eirini Tsermpini1, Anja Plemenitaš Ilješ2, Vita Dolžan1.
Abstract
Alcohol use disorder (AUD) is a highly prevalent, comorbid, and disabling disorder. The underlying mechanism of ethanol neurotoxicity and the involvement of oxidative stress is still not fully elucidated. However, ethanol metabolism has been associated with increased oxidative stress through alcohol dehydrogenase, the microsomal ethanol oxidation system, and catalase metabolic pathways. We searched the PubMed and genome-wide association studies (GWAS) catalog databases to review the literature systematically and summarized the findings focusing on AUD and alcohol abstinence in relation to oxidative stress. In addition, we reviewed the ClinicalTrials.gov resource of the US National Library of Medicine to identify all ongoing and completed clinical trials that include therapeutic interventions based on antioxidants. The retrieved clinical and preclinical studies show that oxidative stress impacts AUD through genetics, alcohol metabolism, inflammation, and neurodegeneration.Entities:
Keywords: alcohol addiction; alcohol dehydrogenase; alcohol dependence; alcohol use disorder; aldehyde dehydrogenase; catalase; glutathione; oxidative stress
Year: 2022 PMID: 35883865 PMCID: PMC9311529 DOI: 10.3390/antiox11071374
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Antioxidants (Basel) ISSN: 2076-3921
Figure 1Ethanol metabolism.
Figure 2PRISMA flow diagram.
Overview of clinical studies on AUD and oxidative stress.
| Topic of the Study | Aim of the Study | Number of | Significant Findings, Safety, Disease | Type of Study | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Evaluation of | To compare oxidative stress and renal and hepatic function parameters upon | 28 | Chlorpromazine showed influence over hepatic function markers and oxidative stress | Prospective | [ |
| Influence of heavy drinking on the onset of | To measure telomere length of Japanese patients with AD and search for an | 255 | Telomere length was almost 50% shorter in AD patients relative to the controls. There were no associations between | Cohort study | [ |
| The correlation | To explore the correlation between alcohol | 95 | Compared to the controls, serum MDA levels were significantly elevated, and SOD | Cohort study | [ |
| Increased | To compare serum 8-OHdG levels between patients with AD and healthy | 142 | The oxidative DNA damage persisted after 1 week of detoxification. The alcohol withdrawal syndrome severity was correlated with the | Prospective | [ |
| Comparison of | To investigate levels of 8-hydroxy-2’-deoxyguanosine (8-OhdG) as a marker of oxidative DNA damage in AD patients | 74 | AD patients with delirium tremens had higher serum 8-OhdG levels than those without | Prospective | [ |
| BDNF and GPX as state biomarkers in AUD | To investigate the serum levels of BDNF and | 34 | Serum levels of oxidative stress markers were significantly higher in the AUD group than in control group, while BDNF levels were lower; after alcohol detoxification treatment, the GPX levels in the AUD group dropped, and the BDNF levels rose | Cohort study | [ |
| Telomere length in AD and its role in | To examine whether | 253 | Patients with AD and high childhood trauma showed a significant relationship between | Prospective study | [ |
| Alterations in | To investigate serial | 140 | Marked oxidative stress in alcoholic patients without severe liver disease was observed; the attenuation of a raised MDA level and lowering of CAT activity appeared after one week of detoxification; alcoholic patients did not | Prospective | [ |
| Oxidative damage to plasma proteins in | To examine the oxidative status of plasma proteins as markers of oxidative stress in subjects with chronic AD with smoking as a | 132 | Systemic oxidative stress in chronic AD was | Prospective | [ |
| Relationship | To assess the correlations between liver function and brain volume | 235 | The results showed that higher liver function levels correlated with brain volume shrinkage in AD patients but not in the controls. | Prospective | [ |
| Oxidative status in | To examine the | 47 | Serum MDA levels of AD patients were found to be significantly increased compared with the controls and decreased after abstinence; serum CAT did not return to normal status at week 2 after abstinence; the activity of CAT was | Prospective | [ |
| Oxidoreductive | To verify the hypothesis that oxidoreductive blood balance can also affect | 77 | The risk of alcohol drinking relapse was lower in patients with an above-median initial blood concentration of nitric oxide metabolites and | Prospective | [ |
| Alcohol-responsive genes in the frontal | To compare the RNA | 14 | Downregulation of genes encoding | Comparative postmortem study | [ |
| MAO-A levels in brain regions in AD | To verify the hypothesis that the MAO-A level is | 32 | MAO-A was significantly greater in the | Cohort study | [ |
| Investigation of | To conduct a comparative investigation of the total antioxidant activity of | 30 | All applied methods revealed that the | Cohort study | [ |
| Concentrations of | The quantitative | 35 | Increased oxidative stress was observed | Cohort study | [ |
Alcohol dependence (AD); catalase (CAT); glutathione peroxidase (GPX); superoxide dismutase (SOD); malondialdehyde (MDA); monoamine oxidase A (MAO-A).
Review articles from which additional information on AUD and oxidative stress was extracted.
| Aim of the Review | Significant Findings | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| To review principles in | Alcohol-induced oxidative stress initiated the innate immune response; no direct link | [ |
| To review | [ | |
| To review the neurobiological basis for alcohol-induced | Oxidative stress plays a critical underlying role in alcohol toxicity and behavioral | [ |
| To review connections | Alcohol use appears to impact carnitine metabolism, most clearly in the setting of alcoholic | [ |
| To provide a rationale for | CBD reduces alcohol-related steatosis and fibrosis in the liver by reducing lipid | [ |
| To review the mechanisms of | Chronic alcohol abuse through oxidative reduction response and inflammatory activation leads to cytoskeletal destabilization of BBB integrity, which further activates astrocytes and, thus, finally causes BBB disruption and neuronal death | [ |
| To review if anxiety disorders, depression, and AUD share oxidative stress in their | Animal and human studies confirm a link between oxidative stress and anxiety, | [ |
| To review how induction of neuroimmune genes by binge drinking increases neuronal excitability and oxidative stress, contributing to the | Ethanol-induced immune gene, NOX, catalyzes the formation of ROS and superoxide and thereby increases oxidative stress; oxidative stress, by inducing innate immune genes, | [ |
| To review the | The evidence from cellular and animal studies and also clinical observations identify H2S as a regulator of oxidative stress and inflammatory response in the pathogenesis of | [ |
| To review neuroimmune | The findings support the hypothesis that adolescence is a period of risk for persistent and long-lasting increases in brain neuroimmune gene expression that promote persistent and long-term increases in alcohol consumption, neuroimmune gene induction, and | [ |
| To review the role of microglia in the regulation of ethanol neurotoxic action | Microglia, the immune cells of the central nervous system, play an essential role in | [ |
| To investigate how alcohol abuse causes damage to and functional impairment of | The potential target of compounds that can be used to prevent therapies for alcohol | [ |
| To evaluate the role of | Redox signaling through oxidation and reduction reactions plays an essential role in | [ |
Blood–brain barrier (BBB); glutathione S-transferase (GST); reactive oxygen species (ROS); NADPH oxidase (NOX).
Candidate gene studies in AUD that focused on associations with polymorphisms in oxidative stress-related pathways.
| Genes and | Number of | Ethnicity | Genotyping | Outcomes | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 201 patients and | Slovenian | TaqMan | Association between rs1001179 and AD and AUDIT scores | [ | |
| 85 | African | TaqMan | No association | [ | |
| 39 patients and | Central | Allele-specific PCR and sequencing | Association between rs1695 and AUD | [ | |
| 200 patients and | North Italian | PCR-RFLP | Association between the | [ | |
| 121 patients and | Central | PCR-RFLP | Association between | [ | |
| 80 AD patients and | Han Chinese | PCR-RFLP | Protective role of | [ | |
| 34 AD patients and | Japanese | PCR-RFLP | Associations between | [ | |
| 9 polymorphisms in | 4597 | Northern | Sequenom mass | Association between | [ |
| 152 | Jewish | Enzymatic | Association between | [ | |
| 5451 | Japanese | TaqMan SNP | Significant association between | [ | |
| 340 | Mission Indian | Allele-specific PCR | Association of | [ | |
| 137 AD patients and | Trinidadian and Toboggan | Sequencing | Association of | [ | |
| 175 SNPs in 17 | 1588 | European American | NA | Strong association | [ |
| 34 AD patients and | New Zealand (White, Asian, and Polynesian (New Zealand Maori and | A newly developed DNA sequencing | Protective role of | [ | |
| 110 SNPs in | NA | European American and African | Sequenom mass | Significant associations between | [ |
| 103 SNPs in the | 812 | Northern and Southern | Sequenom mass | Associations between | [ |
| 68 AUD patients and | Korean | PCR-RFLP | Association between | [ | |
| 99 AUD patients and | Central-West Brazilians | TaqMan assay | Statistically significant association | [ | |
| 153 AUD patients and 153 controls | Japanese | PCR-RFLP | Association between | [ | |
| 104 alcoholics and | Finnish | TaqMan | Association between | [ | |
| ~750,000 genomic variants | 71 heavy drinkers and 126 controls | Taiwanese | High-density SNP | Strong association | [ |
| 5632 | European and African | KASPar assays or | Protective effect of | [ | |
| 43 SNPs | 808 AD patients and | European | Illumina 660 | Association between | [ |
Not available (NA); alcohol dependence (AD); alcohol use disorder (AUD).
GWAS on AUD that observed an association with ethanol metabolism or oxidative stress genes.
| Outcome | Number of Subjects | Ethnicity | Platform | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Association between | 487 AD male | Caucasian (German) | Human-Hap 550 BeadChip | [ |
| Genome-wide significant association between | 86,627 | Non-Hispanic Whites, Hispanic/Latinos, East Asians, and African Americans | Affymetrix Axiom arrays | [ |
| Genome-wide significant associations between AD risk and | 117 AD patients | Korean | Illumina Human660 W | [ |
| Genome-wide significant associations between | 7418 (1121 | European American and | Illumina Human1M array, | [ |
| Genome-wide significant associations with | 1045 | Thai | Illumina Global | [ |
| Identification of two significant loci that were | 533 males with AD and 2848 controls | Han Chinese | Illumina Global Screening | [ |
| Association between rs1229978 (near | 274,424 | European American, African American, Latino American, East, and South Asian | Affymetrix Axiom | [ |
| Association between | 20,328 | European | Illumina HumanHap550+ | [ |
| Association between rs1789891 and AD | 1333 male | Caucasian (German) | Illumina Human610Quad or | [ |
| Association between rs34361428 and AD | 739 patients with ADS and 251 controls | English, Scottish, Welsh, or Irish | Illumina PsychArray | [ |
| Association between AD and | 5697 | European American and African American | Illumina | [ |
| Association between | 313 | Han Chinese | Illumina Cyto12 array | [ |
| Genome-wide significant associations between | 112,117 | White British | Affymetrix UK Biobank Axiom array, Affymetrix UK BiLEVE Axiom array | [ |
| Association between alcohol consumption and | 733 cases and 729 controls | Japanese | Infinium HumanHap550 Bead Array (Illumina) | [ |
| Strong association between | 71 heavy drinkers and 126 controls | Taiwanese | Affymetrix Axiom | [ |
| Significant associations between the maximum number of drinks and | 9500 | European American and | Illumina HumanOmnil-Quad v1.0 microarray | [ |
Alcohol dependence syndrome (ADS); alcohol use disorder (AUD); alcohol dependence (AD).
Preclinical studies of potential therapeutic agents in animal models.
| Topic of the Study | Aim of the Study | Number of | Significant Findings, Safety, Disease Response, and Disease Control | Type of Study | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Oxidative stress inhibition by resveratrol in AD mice | Administration of different dosages of resveratrol in | 5 | Prolonged resveratrol consumption counteracts serum-free oxygen radical formation caused by chronic alcohol intake without influencing the natural free oxygen radical defense in a mouse model of alcohol addiction | Prospective | [ |
| Chronic voluntary alcohol drinking and anxiety-like | To evaluate the effects of | 7 | Chronic voluntary drinking caused anxiety-like behaviors; alcohol increased the expression of neuroinflammation markers and caspase-3 and glial fibrillary acidic protein; alcohol inhibited the expression of thiamine transporters in the brain and reduced thiamine levels in the blood and caused oxidative stress and ER stress and stimulated neurogenesis | Prospective animal study | [ |
| Lobeline as a potential | To evaluate the possible | 69 | Lobeline decreased CAT in the hippocampus; lobeline has anticonvulsant and neuroprotective actions that may be mediated by antioxidant-like mechanisms, indicating its potential as a candidate drug in alcoholism therapy | Prospective animal study | [ |
| Effects of NAC on alcohol | To investigate the association of NAC intake, alcoholism, and | 30 | Ethanol exposure enhanced serum in vivo | Prospective animal study | [ |
| Potential role of clavulanic acid in ethanol | To investigate the effect of clavulanic acid on the | 126 | Clavulanic acid improved withdrawal-induced anxiety-like behavior and seizure | Prospective animal study | [ |
| Level of monoamine oxidase A activity and protein levels in rodent brain during acute withdrawal after chronic | To determine whether chronic alcohol vapor exposure causes upregulation of MAO-A | 16 | Chronic ethanol vapor exposure significantly elevated MAO-A activity and protein levels in the prefrontal and anterior cingulate cortex at 24 h withdrawal | Prospective animal study | [ |
| Olive polyphenol’s effects in a mouse model of chronic ethanol addiction | To determine whether | 40 | Alcoholic mice showed a worse oxidative status than nonalcoholic mice, but polyphenol | Prospective animal study | [ |
| Ethanol-mediated upregulation of interferon-gamma, double-stranded RNA-activated protein kinase and p53 | To investigate the upregulation of the double-stranded RNA-activated protein kinase | 54 | Chronic ethanol exposure activates the IFN-γ–PKR–p53 pathway in the frontal cortex of rodents. Double-stranded RNA-activated protein kinase expression was more significant in the brains of rodents exposed to ethanol at earlier ages compared to later in life, suggesting a mechanism by which young brains could be more susceptible to ethanol-related brain injury | Prospective animal study | [ |
| Sensitivity of the prefrontal cortex and hippocampus to alcohol-induced toxicity | To gain a better understanding of the potential contribution of selective prefrontal cortex | 10 | The prefrontal cortex is more vulnerable to chronic alcohol-induced oxidative stress and neuronal cell death than the hippocampus | Prospective animal study | [ |
| Genetic | To elucidate the mechanisms involved in the actions of a QTL with a significant effect on genetic predisposition to | 54 | Administration of NAC significantly reduces symptoms of alcohol withdrawal (i.e., convulsions) in mice | Prospective animal study | [ |
| Examining the use of MAO inhibitors to prevent ethanol-induced brain injury | To investigate the ethanol-mediated KLF11-MAO cell death cascade in the frontal cortex of rats exposed to a modified binge ethanol model and | 64 | The KLF11-MAO pathway is activated by binge ethanol exposure, and MAOIs are | Prospective animal study | [ |
Brain-derived neurotrophic factors (BDNFs); endoplasmic reticulum (ER); low-density lipoprotein (LDL); quantitative trait loci (QTL); monoamine oxidase inhibitors (MAOIs); N-acetylcysteine (NAC).
Published clinical studies on potential therapeutic agents in humans.
| Topic of the Study | Aim of the Study | Number of Patients Included | Significant Findings, Safety, Disease Response, and Disease Control | Type of Study | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Baclofen in AD | To examine brain metabolites | 31 | There were significant differences | Randomized placebo-controlled trial | [ |
| Influence of neonatal vitamin K and | To test the hypothesis that | 238 | Vitamin K treatment was associated with significantly lower rates of AD and fewer symptoms of problem drinking | Retrospective cohort study | [ |
| Tetrahydrobiopterin and microvascular dysfunction in young adult binge drinkers | To examine microvascular | 36 | In young adult binge drinkers, | Cohort study | [ |
Alcohol dependence (AD).
Registered clinical trials.
| Study Title | NCT | Number of | Condition | Intervention | Endpoints | Study Status | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NAC for | NCT03707951 | 120 | AUD | NAC, placebo | Effects of NAC on a platform of weekly evidence-based brief | Recruiting | NA |
| A Study of NAC | NCT04964843 | 50 | AUD | NAC, placebo | Assess the impact of NAC on AUD | Not yet | NA |
| Influence of NAC | NCT03216954 | 14 | AUD | Alcohol, | Evaluate the behavioral effects of | Complete | No statistically significant results |
| Topiramate | NCT03120468 | 16 | Alcoholism | TPM and NAC, TPM and placebo | Evaluate the safety and tolerability of TPM + NAC versus TPM + placebo for AUD treatment | Active, not | NA |
| Clinical Trial for AUD and | NCT02966873 | 200 | Addiction, alcohol abuse | NAC, placebo, | Evaluate the effects of NAC in | Active, not | NA |
| Melatonin Use for Sleep Problems in AD Patients | NCT03043443 | 60 | Alcohol-related | Melatonin, placebo | Record sleeping problems | Completed | NA |
| NAC | NCT02791945 | 30 | TBI, | Medical | Assess the efficacy of NAC in | Completed | No |
| Imaging | NCT03220776 | 81 | AUD, BD | NAC, gabapentin, | Manipulate neurochemical | Recruiting | NA |
| NAC for | NCT02911285 | 90 | PTSD, AUD, SUD | NAC, placebo, | Determine the benefits of NAC in treating AUD and comorbid PTSD | Completed | Changes in AUD and PTSD severity and |
| Herbal | NCT03503708 | 40 | Alcoholic liver | Livitol-70 | Study the efficacy of the herbal | Not yet | NA |
| Effect of NAC on Alcohol and | NCT03018236 | 100 | Cocaine addiction, | Alcohol NAC, alcohol | Evaluate the use of NAC in the | Unknown | NA |
| Antioxidant | NCT00936000 | 38 | Alcohol abuse | Protandim | Determine the safety and efficacy of in vivo antioxidant replacement | Completed | NA |
| A Study of | NCT03060772 | 50 | Alcoholism | Pioglitazone | Measure the effect of pioglitazone | Terminated due to the fact of | NA |
| NAC in AD | NCT00568087 | 46 | Alcoholism | NAC, placebo | Find out if NAC reduces alcohol drinking and craving | Completed | Reduction in heavy drinking days for both groups |
| NAC plus | NCT01214083 | 111 | Alcoholism | NAC plus high-dose | Determine which of these | Completed | Reduction in heavy drinking days for all groups |
N-acetylcysteine (NAC); alcohol use disorder (AUD); alcohol dependence (AD); topiramate (TPM); post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD); traumatic brain injury (TBI); bipolar disorder (BD); substance use disorder (SUD); not available (NA).