Alcohol, HMGB1, and Innate Immune Signaling in the Brain
Fulton T. Crews, Leon G. Coleman, Victoria A. Macht, Ryan P. Vetreno

TL;DR
This review explores how alcohol, especially binge drinking in adolescence, triggers immune signals in the brain involving HMGB1 and TLRs, contributing to alcohol use disorder.
Contribution
The paper proposes a novel mechanistic hypothesis linking HMGB1 and TLR signaling to alcohol-induced neuroimmune changes and AUD development.
Findings
HMGB1 and TLR signaling are key in alcohol-induced neuroimmune changes across glia and neurons.
Adolescent binge drinking increases brain HMGB1 and alters microglia and neuronal networks.
Anti-inflammatory treatments may help prevent or reverse alcohol-related brain pathology.
Abstract
Binge drinking (i.e., consuming enough alcohol to achieve a blood ethanol concentration of 80 mg/dL, approximately 4–5 drinks within 2 hours), particularly in early adolescence, can promote progressive increases in alcohol drinking and alcohol-related problems that develop into compulsive use in the chronic relapsing disease, alcohol use disorder (AUD). Over the past decade, neuroimmune signaling has been discovered to contribute to alcohol-induced changes in drinking, mood, and neurodegeneration. This review presents a mechanistic hypothesis supporting high mobility group box protein 1 (HMGB1) and Toll-like receptor (TLR) signaling as key elements of alcohol-induced neuroimmune signaling across glia and neurons, which shifts gene transcription and synapses, altering neuronal networks that contribute to the development of AUD. This hypothesis may help guide further research on…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFinance, Taxation, and Governance · Regional Development and Innovation
