Cannabidiol attenuates alcohol-induced liver steatosis, metabolic dysregulation, inflammation and neutrophil-mediated injury.
Yuping WangPartha MukhopadhyayZongxian CaoHua WangDechun FengGyörgy HaskóRaphael MechoulamBin GaoPal PacherPublished in: Scientific reports (2017)
Cannabidiol (CBD) is a non-psychoactive component of marijuana, which has anti-inflammatory effects. It has also been approved by FDA for various orphan diseases for exploratory trials. Herein, we investigated the effects of CBD on liver injury induced by chronic plus binge alcohol feeding in mice. CBD or vehicle was administered daily throughout the alcohol feeding study. At the conclusion of the feeding protocol, serums samples, livers or isolated neutrophils were utilized for molecular biology, biochemistry and pathology analysis. CBD significantly attenuated the alcohol feeding-induced serum transaminase elevations, hepatic inflammation (mRNA expressions of TNFα, MCP1, IL1β, MIP2 and E-Selectin, and neutrophil accumulation), oxidative/nitrative stress (lipid peroxidation, 3-nitrotyrosine formation, and expression of reactive oxygen species generating enzyme NOX2). CBD treatment also attenuated the respiratory burst of neutrophils isolated from chronic plus binge alcohol fed mice or from human blood, and decreased the alcohol-induced increased liver triglyceride and fat droplet accumulation. Furthermore, CBD improved alcohol-induced hepatic metabolic dysregulation and steatosis by restoring changes in hepatic mRNA or protein expression of ACC-1, FASN, PPARα, MCAD, ADIPOR-1, and mCPT-1. Thus, CBD may have therapeutic potential in the treatment of alcoholic liver diseases associated with inflammation, oxidative stress and steatosis, which deserves exploration in human trials.
Keyphrases
- drug induced
- liver injury
- oxidative stress
- diabetic rats
- high glucose
- alcohol consumption
- endothelial cells
- high fat diet induced
- insulin resistance
- reactive oxygen species
- adipose tissue
- type diabetes
- fatty acid
- randomized controlled trial
- poor prognosis
- physical activity
- binding protein
- high throughput
- skeletal muscle
- mass spectrometry
- high resolution
- signaling pathway
- pluripotent stem cells
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- single molecule