Okvist Anna, Johansson Sofia, Kuzmin Alexander, Bazov Igor, Merino-Martinez Roxana, Ponomarev Igor, Mayfield R Dayne, Harris R Adron, Sheedy Donna, Garrick Therese, Harper Clive, Hurd Yasmin L, Terenius Lars, Ekström Tomas J, Bakalkin Georgy, Yakovleva Tatjana
The Section of Alcohol and Drug Dependence Research, Department of Clinical Neuroscience, Karolinska Institute, Stockholm, Sweden.
PLoS One. 2007 Sep 26;2(9):e930. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0000930.
Alcohol dependence and associated cognitive impairments apparently result from neuroadaptations to chronic alcohol consumption involving changes in expression of multiple genes. Here we investigated whether transcription factors of Nuclear Factor-kappaB (NF-kappaB) family, controlling neuronal plasticity and neurodegeneration, are involved in these adaptations in human chronic alcoholics.
Analysis of DNA-binding of NF-kappaB (p65/p50 heterodimer) and the p50 homodimer as well as NF-kappaB proteins and mRNAs was performed in postmortem human brain samples from 15 chronic alcoholics and 15 control subjects. The prefrontal cortex involved in alcohol dependence and cognition was analyzed and the motor cortex was studied for comparison. The p50 homodimer was identified as dominant kappaB binding factor in analyzed tissues. NF-kappaB and p50 homodimer DNA-binding was downregulated, levels of p65 (RELA) mRNA were attenuated, and the stoichiometry of p65/p50 proteins and respective mRNAs was altered in the prefrontal cortex of alcoholics. Comparison of a number of p50 homodimer/NF-kappaB target DNA sites, kappaB elements in 479 genes, down- or upregulated in alcoholics demonstrated that genes with kappaB elements were generally upregulated in alcoholics. No significant differences between alcoholics and controls were observed in the motor cortex.
We suggest that cycles of alcohol intoxication/withdrawal, which may initially activate NF-kappaB, when repeated over years downregulate RELA expression and NF-kappaB and p50 homodimer DNA-binding. Downregulation of the dominant p50 homodimer, a potent inhibitor of gene transcription apparently resulted in derepression of kappaB regulated genes. Alterations in expression of p50 homodimer/NF-kappaB regulated genes may contribute to neuroplastic adaptation underlying alcoholism.
酒精依赖及相关认知障碍显然是由于对长期饮酒的神经适应所致,这涉及多个基因表达的变化。在此,我们研究了控制神经元可塑性和神经变性的核因子-κB(NF-κB)家族转录因子是否参与人类慢性酒精中毒者的这些适应过程。
对15名慢性酒精中毒者和15名对照者的死后人类脑样本进行了NF-κB(p65/p50异二聚体)和p50同二聚体的DNA结合分析以及NF-κB蛋白和mRNA分析。对涉及酒精依赖和认知的前额叶皮质进行了分析,并对运动皮质进行了研究以作比较。p50同二聚体被确定为分析组织中的主要κB结合因子。在酒精中毒者的前额叶皮质中,NF-κB和p50同二聚体的DNA结合下调,p65(RELA)mRNA水平减弱,p65/p50蛋白及各自mRNA的化学计量发生改变。对479个基因中在酒精中毒者中下调或上调的多个p50同二聚体/NF-κB靶DNA位点、κB元件进行比较,结果表明含有κB元件的基因在酒精中毒者中通常上调。在运动皮质中未观察到酒精中毒者与对照者之间的显著差异。
我们认为,酒精中毒/戒断循环最初可能激活NF-κB,但多年重复后会下调RELA表达以及NF-κB和p50同二聚体的DNA结合。占主导地位的p50同二聚体作为一种有效的基因转录抑制剂,其下调显然导致了κB调控基因的去抑制。p50同二聚体/NF-κB调控基因表达的改变可能有助于酒精中毒潜在的神经可塑性适应。