Abstract

Carbohydrate-deficient transferrin (CDT) is now considered to be the most sensitive and specific biological marker of alcohol abuse. However, the mechanism by which chronic alcohol consumption causes an elevation of CDT levels in serum is still not understood. Therefore, we fed eight pairs of male rats a nutritionally adequate liquid diet containing either alcohol (36% of energy) or isocaloric dextrose (control) for 4 weeks, after which blood and liver samples were obtained. Serum CDT content in alcohol-treated rats increased by 45% (P < .05) in ethanol-fed animals compared with their corresponding controls. In contrast, in rats fed ethanol, the activities of sialyltransferase (ST), galactosyltransferase (GT), and N-acetylglucosamine transferase (N-AGT), which are glycosyltransferases involved in transferrin carbohydrate side chain synthesis, were diminished by 24% and 40% (P < .05), 23% and 51% (P < .05, .001), and 20% and 26% (P < .05) in total liver homogenates and Golgi fraction (GF) 1, respectively, when expressed as units/100 g body weight. These enzymes were also significantly less active in hepatic GFs 2 and 3. The depression of the transferase activities in ethanol-fed rats appeared to be due, at least in part, to enzyme inactivation by acetaldehyde, whereas ethanol itself was without effect. Similar results were obtained in humans: five alcohol abusers were found to exhibit a 23% decrease in hepatic sialyltransferase and a 41% increase in sialidase activities, respectively, when compared with three nondrinking subjects.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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