Close X
Saturday, November 2, 2024
ADVT 
Health

How binge drinking harms the liver

Darpan News Desk IANS, 09 Oct, 2014 06:38 AM
    An Indian-origin researcher has identified epigenetic protein changes caused by binge drinking, a discovery that could lead to treatment for alcohol-related liver diseases.
     
    "Our research shows that epigenetic modifications in histone (protein) structures occur within the liver as a result of heavy binge drinking," explained lead researcher Shivendra Shukla, Margaret Proctor Mulligan professor at the University of Missouri's School of Medicine.
     
    Epigenetic alterations are changes in genes that are not caused by changes in the DNA sequence or genetic code.
     
    Histones are proteins that act like a spool to compact and organise the thread-like DNA strands which wrap around them.
     
    Histones work to protect the DNA strand and help it function correctly.
     
    Although histone modification does occur naturally, Shukla and his team found that binge drinking results in unnatural modifications to histones.
     
    In turn, these changes adversely affect how a person's genetic code is interpreted and how it is regulated.
     
    "Every response in the body is due to alterations in proteins. Binge drinking is an environmental trigger that negatively affects histones by altering the correct binding of DNA," Shukla informed.
     
    "This initially causes inflammation and damage to the cells as they form, but it is also eventually the cause of more serious diseases such as cirrhosis and cancer," he maintained.
     
    Binge drinking can create an inflammatory response in the liver that is like a cluster bomb, sending out various damaging signals to other organ systems in the body.
     
    "If those organs are working at a lower level of function, then a whole host of physiological processes are affected as a consequence of binge drinking," Shukla noted.
     
    The paper appeared in Hepatology International, the journal of the Asian Pacific Association for the study of the liver.

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    Researchers make IVF safer for women

    Researchers make IVF safer for women
    Researchers could have just made IVF - an assisted fertilisation therapy - treatment safer for women after successfully using a new method to stimulate ovulation...

    Researchers make IVF safer for women

    Fish oil may save alcoholics from brain damage

    Fish oil may save alcoholics from brain damage
    Omega-3 fish oil could save the brain from alcohol-related damage and dementia by up to 90 percent, a new study says...

    Fish oil may save alcoholics from brain damage

    Are we gulping down plastic with sea food?

    Are we gulping down plastic with sea food?
    According to an alarming study by University of Exeter, tiny plastic particles polluting our seas are entering the bodies of marine creatures through their gills....

    Are we gulping down plastic with sea food?

    Cinnamon can prevent food poisoning

    Cinnamon can prevent food poisoning
    Cinnamon can not only tickle your taste buds, the ancient cooking spice is also an effective anti-bacterial agent and can help prevent some of the most serious food-borne...

    Cinnamon can prevent food poisoning

    Probiotics help reduce fat in liver

    Probiotics help reduce fat in liver
    For people suffering from non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, eating probiotics for a month can help diminish the accumulation of fat in the liver...

    Probiotics help reduce fat in liver

    Now, cancer vaccine from cat poop parasite

    Now, cancer vaccine from cat poop parasite
    You may soon look at cat poop in a different light as it may hold the key to cancer cure.

    Now, cancer vaccine from cat poop parasite