Articles features
Vitamin A linked to alcoholic liver disease development
New York, Sep 2
Counteracting alcohol's effect
on vitamin A levels in the liver may lead to novel treatments for
alcoholic liver disease, suggests new research.
In particular, the research found that chronic alcohol consumption has a dramatic effect on the way the body handles vitamin A.
Long-term
drinking lowers vitamin A levels in the liver, which is the main site
of alcohol breakdown and vitamin A storage, while raising vitamin A
levels in many other tissues.
"We hope this study will lead to a
broader understanding and appreciation of the fact that excessive
consumption of alcohol has a negative effect on vitamin A function in
the body," said one of the researchers Robin Clugston from Columbia
University Medical Center in New York, New York.
"Ultimately, we
hope that vitamin A will be seen as a broad target for alcohol in
multiple tissues of the body and that our understanding of
alcohol-induced disease will be linked together by its effects on
vitamin A," Clugston noted.
Clugston and colleagues conducted
multiple experiments using several groups of mice including those who
received alcohol-containing food and alcohol-free food.
They
analysed the liver and other organs (kidney, spleen, heart, lung, white
adipose, brown adipose and blood), from both groups of mice and measured
tissue vitamin A levels.
The alcohol-fed mice had distinct
changes in how their body handled vitamin A. In general, vitamin A
levels were lower in the liver and higher in other tissues.
This
strongly suggests that vitamin A in the liver is reduced by excessive
alcohol consumption and that these findings are important in the
development of alcoholic liver disease.
The findings appeared in the FASEB Journal.