Litcius/Paper detail

Sex-dependent factors of alcohol and neuroimmune mechanisms

Bryan Cruz, Vittoria Borgonetti, Michal Bajo, Marisa Roberto

2023Neurobiology of Stress35 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Excessive alcohol use disrupts neuroimmune signaling across various cell types, including neurons, microglia, and astrocytes. The present review focuses on recent, albeit limited, evidence of sex differences in biological factors that mediate neuroimmune responses to alcohol and underlying neuroimmune systems that may influence alcohol drinking behaviors. Females are more vulnerable than males to the neurotoxic and negative consequences of chronic alcohol drinking, reflected by elevations of pro-inflammatory cytokines and inflammatory mediators. Differences in cytokine, microglial, astrocytic, genomic, and transcriptomic evidence suggest females are more reactive than males to neuroinflammatory changes after chronic alcohol exposure. The growing body of evidence supports that innate immune factors modulate synaptic transmission, providing a mechanistic framework to examine sex differences across neurocircuitry. Targeting neuroimmune signaling may be a viable strategy for treating AUD, but more research is needed to understand sex-specific differences in alcohol drinking and neuroimmune mechanisms.

Topics & Concepts

MicrogliaNeuroinflammationTranscriptomeNeuroscienceImmune systemPsychoneuroimmunologyInnate immune systemPsychologyInflammationImmunologyMedicineBiologyGene expressionGeneticsGeneNeuroinflammation and Neurodegeneration MechanismsTryptophan and brain disordersStress Responses and Cortisol