Lycopene Pretreatment Ameliorates Acute Ethanol Induced NAD+Depletion in Human Astroglial Cells

Author:

Guest Jade12,Guillemin Gilles J.3,Heng Benjamin3,Grant Ross124

Affiliation:

1. Australasian Research Institute, Sydney Adventist Hospital, Sydney, NSW 2076, Australia

2. Department of Pharmacology, School of Medical Sciences, Faculty of Medicine, University of New South Wales, Sydney, NSW 2052, Australia

3. Neuropharmacology Group, MND and Neurodegenerative Diseases Research Centre, Macquarie University, Sydney, NSW 2109, Australia

4. Sydney Adventist Hospital Clinical School, University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW 2076, Australia

Abstract

Excessive alcohol consumption is associated with reduced brain volume and cognition. While the mechanisms by which ethanol induces these deleterious effectsin vivoare varied most are associated with increased inflammatory and oxidative processes. In order to further characterise the effect of acute ethanol exposure on oxidative damage and NAD+levels in the brain, human U251 astroglioma cells were exposed to physiologically relevant doses of ethanol (11 mM, 22 mM, 65 mM, and 100 mM) for ≤ 30 minutes. Ethanol exposure resulted in a dose dependent increase in both ROS and poly(ADP-ribose) polymer production. Significant decreases in total NAD(H) and sirtuin 1 activity were also observed at concentrations ≥ 22 mM. Similar to U251 cells, exposure to ethanol (≥22 mM) decreased levels of NAD(H) in primary human astrocytes. NAD(H) depletion in primary astrocytes was prevented by pretreatment with 1 μM of lycopene for 3.5 hours. Unexpectedly, in U251 cells lycopene treatment at concentrations ≥ 5 μM resulted in significant reductions in [NAD(H)]. This study suggests that exposure of the brain to alcohol at commonly observed blood concentrations may cause transitory oxidative damage which may be at least partly ameliorated by lycopene.

Funder

Bupa Foundation

Publisher

Hindawi Limited

Subject

Cell Biology,Ageing,General Medicine,Biochemistry

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