Alcohol increases hepatitis C virus in human cells
Drinking may compromise treatment success
A team of NIH-supported researchers today report that alcohol increases
replication of the hepatitis C virus (HCV) in human cells and, by so doing, may
contribute to the rapid course of HCV infection. The researchers tested the
actions of alcohol in HCV replicon--viral HCV-ribonucleic acid or HCV-RNAs that,
when introduced into human liver cell lines, replicate to high levels. In
separate laboratory experiments they showed that:
alcohol increases HCV replication at least in part by upregulating a
key cellular regulator of immune pathways and function known as nuclear
factor kappa B (NF-kappa B):
alcohol inhibits the anti-HCV effect of interferon-alpha
(INF-alpha)therapy; and
treatment with the opioid antagonist naltrexone abolishes alcohol
actions.
Wenzhe Ho, M.D., and Steven D. Douglas, M.D., Department of Pediatrics,
University of Pennsylvania, and the Joseph Stokes, Jr. Research Institute at The
Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, and colleagues in the Department of
Psychiatry, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine report their results
in the July 2003 issue of Hepatology (Volume 38, Number 1, pages 57-65).
Speculating that alcohol somehow promotes HCV expression, the researchers
relied on a recently available cellular system for studying the dynamics of
virus replication (developed and provided to the investigators by Drs. C. M.
Rice, The Rockefeller University, and Christoph Seeger, Fox Chase Cancer Center)
to demonstrate for the first time that alcohol enhances HCV replicon expression
at both the messenger RNA and protein levels. In the cell lines used for the
study, the research team also showed that alcohol activation of NF-kappa B was
responsible for increasing HCV expression. "Although the replicon system mimics
only some aspects of HCV replication, we have identified at least a likely
mechanism whereby alcohol increases viral load and thus may become an important
cofactor in HCV severity," Dr. Douglas said.
"These findings are immediately useful to clinicians for counseling
HCV-positive patients about alcohol use," said Ting-Kai Li, M.D., Director,
National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA). "For clinical and
basic scientists, they raise new research questions, many of which no doubt will
be explored using the model and methods introduced today." NIAAA supported the
experiments through a grant to Dr. Douglas, whose work also was supported by the
National Institute of Mental Health and the National Institute on Drug Abuse
(NIDA). The NIAAA and NIDA supported Dr. Ho's work on the study.
HCV is an RNA virus of the flavivirus family that infects about 4 million
U.S. residents and produces some 30,000 new infections each year. HCV typically
escapes clearance by the immune system and leads to persistent, chronic
infection in 70 to 85 percent of infected individuals, of whom fewer than 50
percent respond to IFN-alpha, the HCV therapy of choice. Over the long term, HCV
infection can lead to cirrhosis, liver failure, and liver cancer. As a group,
HCV-infected individuals are the major recipients of liver transplantation.
Clinicians have long observed a high incidence of HCV infection in heavy
drinkers, including those without other risk factors such as intravenous drug
abuse or history of blood transfusions. In addition, the virus is more likely to
persist in heavy drinkers and to lead to such complications as cirrhosis and
liver cancer. Suspected mechanisms for the latter effects include alcohol's
capacity to compromise immune function and enhance oxidative stress. The role of
alcohol use in HCV acquisition has been more of a mystery.
During the 1990s, several studies reported higher blood levels of HCV in
drinkers than abstainers and in habitual than infrequent drinkers. Further,
drinking reduction was shown to diminish the number of virus particles in the
blood. These observations led Dr. Douglas and his colleagues to pursue the role
of alcohol in HCV replication.
Using the same replicon, Drs. Ho, Douglas and their colleagues also
demonstrated that alcohol compromises IFN-alpha action against HCV and explored
a plausible mechanism for alcohol's role in HCV expression. Alcohol interferes
with endogenous opiates, which have a key role in its addictive properties. The
researchers found that the opiate receptor antagonist naltrexone, better known
for its utility in helping alcoholism treatment patients to avoid relapse, not
only blocked the promoting effect of alcohol on HCV expression but also
diminished alcohol activation of NF-kappa B in these cells. "These data strongly
suggest that activation of the endogenous opioid system is implicated in
alcohol-induced HCV expression," the authors conclude.
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For an interview with Dr. Douglas, please telephone 215-590-1978; for an
interview with Dr. Ho, please telephone 215-590-4462. For an interview with
NIAAA staff members, please contact the NIAAA Press Office. Publications and
additional alcohol research information are available at
http://www.niaaa.nih.gov.
The National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, a component of the
National Institutes of Health, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services,
conducts and supports approximately 90 percent of U.S. research on the causes,
consequences, prevention, and treatment of alcohol abuse, alcoholism, and
alcohol problems and disseminates research findings to science, practitioner,
policy making, and general audiences.
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