The effects of alcohol dependence on the CSF proteome in mice: Evidence for blood-brain barrier dysfunction and neuroinflammation
Natalie P. Turner, Michal Bajo, Amanda J. Roberts, Marisa Roberto, John R. Yates

TL;DR
This study shows that alcohol dependence in mice causes blood-brain barrier damage and brain inflammation, as seen through changes in cerebrospinal fluid proteins.
Contribution
The study provides novel proteomic evidence linking alcohol dependence to blood-brain barrier dysfunction and neuroinflammation in mice.
Findings
Dependent mice showed proteins indicating blood-brain barrier disruption and neuroinflammation.
Non-dependent mice retained protective mechanisms like complement regulation and anti-inflammatory signaling.
Ethanol-dependent-specific proteins included MMP2, BIP, and GFAP, suggesting early vascular and neuronal damage.
Abstract
Alcohol use disorder (AUD) represents a significant neurological health burden, yet the biological mechanisms underlying alcohol-induced brain pathology remain incompletely understood. Moreover, the molecular underpinnings of the transition from alcohol exposure to alcohol dependence are not well-characterized. We used mass spectrometry (MS)-based proteomics in a preliminary discovery study to compare cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) of alcohol-exposed Non-dependent (Non-dep) versus alcohol-dependent (Dep) mice that underwent the chronic intermittent ethanol (alcohol) – two-bottle choice (CIE-2 BCE) procedure and systemic anti-IL-6 Receptor antibody administration (n = 9; female = 5, male = 4). CSF samples from individual mice were processed for proteomic analysis and digested with trypsin overnight. Peptides were analyzed via data-independent acquisition (DIA)-MS and data were processed in…
Genes, proteins, chemicals, diseases, species, mutations and cell lines named across the full text — each resolved to its canonical identifier and authoritative record.
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Taxonomy
TopicsAlcoholism and Thiamine Deficiency · Alcohol Consumption and Health Effects · Neuroinflammation and Neurodegeneration Mechanisms
