4.2 Article

Alcohol and lung injury and immunity

期刊

ALCOHOL
卷 55, 期 -, 页码 51-59

出版社

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.alcohol.2016.08.005

关键词

Alcohol; Lung immunity; Lung injury; Gut-liver-lung axis; Airway cilia; Alveolar macrophage

资金

  1. NIH [R01 GM115257, R01 AA012034, R21 AA023193, T32 AA013527, F30 AA022856, R01 AA008769, F32 AA019859, F30 AA024676]
  2. Dr. Ralph and Marian C. Falk Medical Research Trust
  3. Emory Alcohol & Lung Biology Center [P50 AA135757, AHA SDG 13SDG13930003, K99 AA021803, R00 AA021803]
  4. University of Colorado Department of Medicine Team Science Award
  5. [R24 AA019661]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Annually, excessive alcohol use accounts for more than $220 billion in economic costs and 80,000 deaths, making excessive alcohol use the third leading lifestyle-related cause of death in the US. Patients with an alcohol-use disorder (AUD) also have an increased susceptibility to respiratory pathogens and lung injury, including a 2-4-fold increased risk of acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). This review investigates some of the potential mechanisms by which alcohol causes lung injury and impairs lung immunity. In intoxicated individuals with burn injuries, activation of the gut-liver axis drives pulmonary inflammation, thereby negatively impacting morbidity and mortality. In the lung, the upper airway is the first checkpoint to fail in microbe clearance during alcohol-induced lung immune dysfunction. Brief and prolonged alcohol exposure drive different post-translational modifications of novel proteins that control cilia function. Proteomic approaches are needed to identify novel alcohol targets and post-translational modifications in airway cilia that are involved in alcohol-dependent signal transduction pathways. When the upper airway fails to clear inhaled pathogens, they enter the alveolar space where they are primarily cleared by alveolar macrophages (AM). With chronic alcohol ingestion, oxidative stress pathways in the AMs are stimulated, thereby impairing AM immune capacity and pathogen clearance. The epidemiology of pneumococcal pneumonia and AUDs is well established, as both increased predisposition and illness severity have been reported. AUD subjects have increased susceptibility to pneumococcal pneumonia infections, which may be due to the pro-inflammatory response of AMs, leading to increased oxidative stress. (C) 2016 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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