Gene expression modifications in the liver caused by binge drinking and S-adenosylmethionine feeding. The role of epigenetic changes

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Abstract

Chronic ethanol ingestion, achieved by feeding ethanol at a constant rate using intragastric tube feeding, alters the expression of genes in the liver. This is done by epigenetic mechanisms, which depend on the blood alcohol levels at the time of killing. However, acute bolus feeding of ethanol changes gene expression without lasting epigenetic changes. This occurs with histone 3 methylation and acetylation modifications. The gene expression response to an acute bolus of ethanol might be modified by feeding S-adenosylmethionine (SAMe), a methyl donor. In the present study, rats were given a bolus of ethanol (6 g/kg body weight (bw), SAMe (1 g/kg bw), ethanol ? SAMe, or isocaloric glucose. The group of rats (n = 3) were killed at 3 and 12 h post bolus, and gene microarray analysis was performed on their liver cells. SAMe reduced the 3 h blood ethanol levels and increased the ALT levels at 3 h. Venn agrams showed that alcohol changed the expression of 646 genes at 3 h post bolus and 586 genes at 12 h. SAMe changed the expression of 1,012 genes when fed with ethanol 3 h post ethanol bolus and 554 genes at 12 h post ethanol bolus. SAMe alone changed the expression of 1,751 genes at 3 h and 1,398 at 12 h. There were more changes in gene expression at 3 h than at 12 h post ethanol when ethanol alone was compared to the dextrose control. The same was true when SAMe was compared to SAMe ? ethanol. Ethanol up regulated gene expression in most functional pathways at 3 h. However, when SAMe was fed with ethanol at 3 h, most pathways were down regulated. At 12 h, however, when ethanol was fed, the pathways were half up regulated and half down regulated. The same was true when SAMe ? ethanol was fed. The expression of epigenetically important genes, such as BHMT and Foxn3, was up regulated 3 h post alcohol bolus. At 3 h, SAMe down regulated the expression of genes, such as BHMT, Mat2a, Jun, Tnfrs9, Ahcy 1, Tgfbr1 and 2, and Pcaf. At 12 h, the insulin signaling pathways were half down regulated by ethanol, which was partly prevented by SAMe. The MAPK pathway was up regulated by ethanol, but SAMe did not prevent this. In conclusion, profound changes in gene expression evolved between 3 h and 12 post ethanol bolus. SAMe down regulated these changes in gene expression at 3 h, and less so at 12 h. © Springer-Verlag 2009.

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Li, J., Bardag-Gorce, F., Oliva, J., Dedes, J., French, B. A., & French, S. W. (2010). Gene expression modifications in the liver caused by binge drinking and S-adenosylmethionine feeding. The role of epigenetic changes. Genes and Nutrition, 5(2), 169–179. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12263-009-0158-x

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