Developmental Exposure Alcohol Research Center, Behavioral Neuroscience Program, Department of Psychology, Binghamton, NY 13902-6000, United States of America.
Developmental Exposure Alcohol Research Center, Behavioral Neuroscience Program, Department of Psychology, Binghamton, NY 13902-6000, United States of America.
Pharmacol Biochem Behav. 2022 May;216:173390. doi: 10.1016/j.pbb.2022.173390. Epub 2022 Apr 18.
For many individuals, first exposure to alcohol occurs either prenatally due to maternal drinking, or during adolescence, when alcohol consumption is most likely to be initiated. Prenatal Alcohol Exposure (PAE) and its associated Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders (FASD) in humans is associated with earlier initiation of alcohol use and increased rates of Alcohol Use Disorders (AUD). Initiation of alcohol use and misuse in early adolescence correlates highly with later AUD diagnosis as well. Thus, PAE and adolescent binge drinking set the stage for long-term health consequences due to adverse effects of alcohol on subsequent immune function, effects that may persist across the lifespan. The overarching goal of this review, therefore, is to determine the extent to which early developmental exposure to alcohol produces long-lasting, and potentially life-long, changes in immunological function. Alcohol affects the whole body, yet most studies are narrowly focused on individual features of immune function, largely ignoring the systems-level interactions required for effective host defense. We therefore emphasize the crucial role of the Central Nervous System (CNS) in orchestrating host defense processes. We argue that alcohol-mediated disruption of host immunity can occur through both (a) direct action of ethanol on neuroimmune processes, that subsequently disrupt peripheral immune function (top down); and (b) indirect action of ethanol on peripheral immune organs/cells, which in turn elicit consequent changes in CNS neuroimmune function (bottom up). Recognizing that alcohol consumption across the entire body, we argue in favor of integrative, whole-organism approaches toward understanding alcohol effects on immune function, and highlight the need for more work specifically examining long-lasting effects of early developmental exposure to alcohol (prenatal and adolescent periods) on host immunity.
对于许多人来说,首次接触酒精要么是因为母亲在怀孕期间饮酒,要么是在青少年时期,此时最有可能开始饮酒。人类的产前酒精暴露 (PAE) 及其相关的胎儿酒精谱系障碍 (FASD) 与更早开始饮酒和更高的酒精使用障碍 (AUD) 发生率有关。青少年早期开始饮酒和滥用酒精也与后来的 AUD 诊断高度相关。因此,PAE 和青少年 binge drinking 为长期健康后果奠定了基础,因为酒精对随后的免疫功能产生了不良影响,这种影响可能会持续一生。因此,本综述的总体目标是确定早期发育过程中接触酒精在多大程度上会对免疫功能产生持久的、潜在的终生影响。酒精会影响全身,但大多数研究都只关注免疫功能的个别特征,在很大程度上忽略了有效宿主防御所需的系统级相互作用。因此,我们强调中枢神经系统 (CNS) 在协调宿主防御过程中的关键作用。我们认为,酒精介导的宿主免疫破坏可能通过以下两种方式发生:(a) 乙醇对神经免疫过程的直接作用,随后破坏外周免疫功能(自上而下);(b) 乙醇对外周免疫器官/细胞的间接作用,进而引起 CNS 神经免疫功能的相应变化(自下而上)。我们认识到,整个身体都在饮酒,因此我们主张采取综合的、全器官的方法来理解酒精对免疫功能的影响,并强调需要更多的工作来专门研究早期发育过程中接触酒精(产前和青少年时期)对宿主免疫的持久影响。