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Dipeptide YA is Responsible for the Positive Effect of Oyster Hydrolysates on Alcohol Metabolism in Single Ethanol Binge Rodent Models

Accumulative alcohol hangovers cause liver damage through oxidative and inflammatory stress. Numerous antioxidant and anti-inflammatory reagents have been developed to reduce alcohol hangovers, but these reagents are still insignificant and have limitations in that they can cause liver toxicity. Oys...

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Autores principales: Siregar, Adrian S., Nyiramana, Marie Merci, Kim, Eun-Jin, Shin, Eui-Jung, Woo, Min Seok, Kim, Jin-Mok, Kim, Jung Hwan, Lee, Dong Kun, Hahm, Jong Ryeal, Kim, Hyun Joon, Kim, Chang-Woon, Kim, Nam-Gil, Park, Si-Hyang, Choi, Yeung Joon, Kang, Sang Soo, Hong, Seong-Geun, Han, Jaehee, Kang, Dawon
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7601867/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33050644
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/md18100512
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author Siregar, Adrian S.
Nyiramana, Marie Merci
Kim, Eun-Jin
Shin, Eui-Jung
Woo, Min Seok
Kim, Jin-Mok
Kim, Jung Hwan
Lee, Dong Kun
Hahm, Jong Ryeal
Kim, Hyun Joon
Kim, Chang-Woon
Kim, Nam-Gil
Park, Si-Hyang
Choi, Yeung Joon
Kang, Sang Soo
Hong, Seong-Geun
Han, Jaehee
Kang, Dawon
author_facet Siregar, Adrian S.
Nyiramana, Marie Merci
Kim, Eun-Jin
Shin, Eui-Jung
Woo, Min Seok
Kim, Jin-Mok
Kim, Jung Hwan
Lee, Dong Kun
Hahm, Jong Ryeal
Kim, Hyun Joon
Kim, Chang-Woon
Kim, Nam-Gil
Park, Si-Hyang
Choi, Yeung Joon
Kang, Sang Soo
Hong, Seong-Geun
Han, Jaehee
Kang, Dawon
author_sort Siregar, Adrian S.
collection PubMed
description Accumulative alcohol hangovers cause liver damage through oxidative and inflammatory stress. Numerous antioxidant and anti-inflammatory reagents have been developed to reduce alcohol hangovers, but these reagents are still insignificant and have limitations in that they can cause liver toxicity. Oyster hydrolysate (OH), another reagent that has antioxidant and anti-inflammatory activity, is a product extracted through an enzymatic hydrolysis process from oysters (Crassostrea gigas), which can be easily eaten in meals. This study was aimed at determining the effects of OH on alcohol metabolism, using a single high dose of ethanol (EtOH) administered to rodents, by monitoring alcohol metabolic enzymes, oxidative stress signals, and inflammatory mediators. The effect of tyrosine-alanine (YA) peptide, a main component of OH, on EtOH metabolism was also identified. In vitro experiments showed that OH pretreatment inhibited EtOH-induced cell death, oxidative stress, and inflammation in liver cells and macrophages. In vivo experiments showed that OH and YA pre-administration increased alcohol dehydrogenase, aldehyde dehydrogenase, and catalase activity in EtOH binge treatment. In addition, OH pre-administration alleviated CYP2E1 activity, ROS production, apoptotic signals, and inflammatory mediators in liver tissues. These results showed that OH and YA enhanced EtOH metabolism and had a protective effect against acute alcohol liver damage. Our findings offer new insights into a single high dose of EtOH drinking and suggest that OH and YA could be used as potential marine functional foods to prevent acute alcohol-induced liver damage.
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spelling pubmed-76018672020-11-01 Dipeptide YA is Responsible for the Positive Effect of Oyster Hydrolysates on Alcohol Metabolism in Single Ethanol Binge Rodent Models Siregar, Adrian S. Nyiramana, Marie Merci Kim, Eun-Jin Shin, Eui-Jung Woo, Min Seok Kim, Jin-Mok Kim, Jung Hwan Lee, Dong Kun Hahm, Jong Ryeal Kim, Hyun Joon Kim, Chang-Woon Kim, Nam-Gil Park, Si-Hyang Choi, Yeung Joon Kang, Sang Soo Hong, Seong-Geun Han, Jaehee Kang, Dawon Mar Drugs Article Accumulative alcohol hangovers cause liver damage through oxidative and inflammatory stress. Numerous antioxidant and anti-inflammatory reagents have been developed to reduce alcohol hangovers, but these reagents are still insignificant and have limitations in that they can cause liver toxicity. Oyster hydrolysate (OH), another reagent that has antioxidant and anti-inflammatory activity, is a product extracted through an enzymatic hydrolysis process from oysters (Crassostrea gigas), which can be easily eaten in meals. This study was aimed at determining the effects of OH on alcohol metabolism, using a single high dose of ethanol (EtOH) administered to rodents, by monitoring alcohol metabolic enzymes, oxidative stress signals, and inflammatory mediators. The effect of tyrosine-alanine (YA) peptide, a main component of OH, on EtOH metabolism was also identified. In vitro experiments showed that OH pretreatment inhibited EtOH-induced cell death, oxidative stress, and inflammation in liver cells and macrophages. In vivo experiments showed that OH and YA pre-administration increased alcohol dehydrogenase, aldehyde dehydrogenase, and catalase activity in EtOH binge treatment. In addition, OH pre-administration alleviated CYP2E1 activity, ROS production, apoptotic signals, and inflammatory mediators in liver tissues. These results showed that OH and YA enhanced EtOH metabolism and had a protective effect against acute alcohol liver damage. Our findings offer new insights into a single high dose of EtOH drinking and suggest that OH and YA could be used as potential marine functional foods to prevent acute alcohol-induced liver damage. MDPI 2020-10-11 /pmc/articles/PMC7601867/ /pubmed/33050644 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/md18100512 Text en © 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Siregar, Adrian S.
Nyiramana, Marie Merci
Kim, Eun-Jin
Shin, Eui-Jung
Woo, Min Seok
Kim, Jin-Mok
Kim, Jung Hwan
Lee, Dong Kun
Hahm, Jong Ryeal
Kim, Hyun Joon
Kim, Chang-Woon
Kim, Nam-Gil
Park, Si-Hyang
Choi, Yeung Joon
Kang, Sang Soo
Hong, Seong-Geun
Han, Jaehee
Kang, Dawon
Dipeptide YA is Responsible for the Positive Effect of Oyster Hydrolysates on Alcohol Metabolism in Single Ethanol Binge Rodent Models
title Dipeptide YA is Responsible for the Positive Effect of Oyster Hydrolysates on Alcohol Metabolism in Single Ethanol Binge Rodent Models
title_full Dipeptide YA is Responsible for the Positive Effect of Oyster Hydrolysates on Alcohol Metabolism in Single Ethanol Binge Rodent Models
title_fullStr Dipeptide YA is Responsible for the Positive Effect of Oyster Hydrolysates on Alcohol Metabolism in Single Ethanol Binge Rodent Models
title_full_unstemmed Dipeptide YA is Responsible for the Positive Effect of Oyster Hydrolysates on Alcohol Metabolism in Single Ethanol Binge Rodent Models
title_short Dipeptide YA is Responsible for the Positive Effect of Oyster Hydrolysates on Alcohol Metabolism in Single Ethanol Binge Rodent Models
title_sort dipeptide ya is responsible for the positive effect of oyster hydrolysates on alcohol metabolism in single ethanol binge rodent models
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7601867/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33050644
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/md18100512
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