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Am J Physiol Endocrinol Metab 285: E1273-E1281, 2003. First published July 22, 2003; doi:10.1152/ajpendo.00019.2003
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Acute and chronic effects of alcohol exposure on skeletal muscle c-myc, p53, and Bcl-2 mRNA expression

Tatsuo Nakahara,1 Kijiro Hashimoto,2 Makoto Hirano,2 Michael Koll,3 Colin R. Martin,4 and Victor R. Preedy3,5

1Department of Chemistry, Faculty of Science, Kyushu University Ropponmatsu, Fukuoka 810-8560; 2Center for Emotional and Behavioural Disorders, Hizen National Mental Hospital, Kanzaki, Saga 842-0104, Japan; 3Department of Nutrition and Dietetics, and 5Genomics Centre, King's College London, London SE1 9NN; and 4Department of Health Sciences, Alcuin College, University of York, Heslington, York YO10 5DD, United Kingdom

Submitted 14 January 2003 ; accepted in final form 21 May 2003

Skeletal muscle atrophy is a common feature in alcoholism that affects up to two-thirds of alcohol misusers, and women appear to be particularly susceptible. There is also some evidence to suggest that malnutrition exacerbates the effects of alcohol on muscle. However, the mechanisms responsible for the myopathy remain elusive, and some studies suggest that acetaldehyde, rather than alcohol, is the principal pathogenic perturbant. Previous reports on rats dosed acutely with ethanol (<24 h) have suggested that increased proto-oncogene expression (i.e., c-myc) may be a causative process, possibly via activating preapoptotic or transcriptional pathways. We hypothesized that 1) increases in c-myc mRNA levels also occur in muscle exposed chronically to alcohol, 2) muscle of female rats is more sensitive than that from male rats, 3) raising acetaldehyde will also increase c-myc, 4) prior starvation will cause further increases in c-myc mRNA expression in response to ethanol, and 5) other genes involved in apoptosis (i.e., p53 and Bcl-2) would also be affected by alcohol. To test this, we measured c-myc mRNA levels in skeletal muscle of rats dosed either chronically (6–7 wk; ethanol as 35% of total dietary energy) or acutely (2.5 h; ethanol as 75 mmol/kg body wt ip) with ethanol. All experiments were carried out in male Wistar rats (~0.1–0.15 kg body wt) except the study that examined gender susceptibility in male and female rats. At the end of the studies, rats were killed, and c-myc, p53, and Bcl-2 mRNA was analyzed in skeletal muscle by RT-PCR with an endogenous internal standard, GAPDH. The results showed that 1) in male rats fed ethanol chronically, there were no increases in c-myc mRNA; 2) increases, however, occurred in c-myc mRNA in muscle from female rats fed ethanol chronically; 3) raising endogenous acetaldehyde with cyanamide increased c-myc mRNA in acute studies; 4) starvation per se increased c-myc mRNA levels and at 1 day potentiated the acute effects of ethanol, indicative of a sensitization response; 5) the only effect seen with p53 mRNA levels was a decrease in muscle of rats starved for 1 day compared with fed rats, and there was no statistically significant effect on Bcl-2 mRNA in any of the experimental conditions. The increases in c-myc may well represent a preapoptotic effect, or even a nonspecific cellular stress response to alcohol and/or acetaldehyde. These data are important in our understanding of a common muscle pathology induced by alcohol.

muscle; ethanol; myopathy; starvation; acetaldehyde



Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: V. R. Preedy, Dept. of Nutrition and Dietetics, Genomics Centre, King's College London, 150 Stamford St. London, London SE1 9NN, UK (E-mail: victor.preedy{at}kcl.ac.uk).




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