Litcius/Paper detail

Host Factors in Dysregulation of the Gut Barrier Function during Alcohol-Associated Liver Disease

Luca Maccioni, Isabelle Leclercq, Bernd Schnabl, Peter Stärkel

2021International Journal of Molecular Sciences27 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Chronic alcohol consumption and alcohol-associated liver disease (ALD) represent a major public health problem worldwide. Only a minority of patients with an alcohol-use disorder (AUD) develop severe forms of liver disease (e.g., steatohepatitis and fibrosis) and finally progress to the more advanced stages of ALD, such as severe alcohol-associated hepatitis and decompensated cirrhosis. Emerging evidence suggests that gut barrier dysfunction is multifactorial, implicating microbiota changes, alterations in the intestinal epithelium, and immune dysfunction. This failing gut barrier ultimately allows microbial antigens, microbes, and metabolites to translocate to the liver and into systemic circulation. Subsequent activation of immune and inflammatory responses contributes to liver disease progression. Here we review the literature about the disturbance of the different host defense mechanisms linked to gut barrier dysfunction, increased microbial translocation, and impairment of liver and systemic inflammatory responses in the different stages of ALD.

Topics & Concepts

Immune dysregulationSteatohepatitisCirrhosisImmunologyLiver diseaseAlcoholic liver diseaseMicrobiomeImmune systemGut floraAlcoholic hepatitisFatty liverBarrier functionDiseaseMedicineBiologyInternal medicineBioinformaticsCell biologyLiver Disease Diagnosis and TreatmentAlcohol Consumption and Health EffectsGut microbiota and health