Adolescent binge drinking disrupts hepatic lipid homeostasis, leading to steatosis in rats: protective role of folic acid in cholesterol and fatty acid balance
- PMID: 40601868
- DOI: 10.1152/ajpgi.00129.2025
Adolescent binge drinking disrupts hepatic lipid homeostasis, leading to steatosis in rats: protective role of folic acid in cholesterol and fatty acid balance
Abstract
Alcohol liver damage (ALD) is increasing worldwide among adolescents, along with binge drinking (BD). BD is an acute alcohol consumption pattern, strongly pro-oxidant in the liver, and may be associated with steatosis, the first step in ALD. Folic acid (FA), an antioxidant crucial for liver function, shows compromised hepatic stores after BD. Therefore, this study aims to analyze the hepatic lipid changes associated with BD-induced steatosis during adolescence in rats and to evaluate the efficacy of FA supplementation in preventing these alterations. Four groups of adolescent rats were used: control, BD (intraperitoneal alcohol exposure), control FA-supplemented, and BD-FA-supplemented. FA content was 2 ppm in control diets and 8 ppm in supplemented groups. BD impaired liver function by increasing transaminases and UGT-1 expression. BD also induced dyslipidemia and an anabolic liver lipid state by increasing hepatic cholesteryl esters depots through dysregulation of cholesterol modulators (HMGCR, SREBP1, LDLR, SR-B1, ACAT-2, and Ces1d) and enhancing FXR expression, which affected liver bile acid balance. Furthermore, BD promoted all sources of hepatic free fatty acids (de novo synthesis, dietary source, and adipose tissue uptake) and impaired their hepatic clearance, contributing to steatosis as confirmed by microvesicular lipid droplet accumulation. FA supplementation, mainly by improving hepatic cholesterol balance and stimulating free fatty acid mobilization, partially prevented these alterations, with beneficial effects on cardiovascular health. In conclusion, this study demonstrates for the first time that BD in adolescents disturbs hepatic lipid homeostasis, leading to steatosis, and that FA therapy could be used to mitigate these deleterious effects.NEW & NOTEWORTHY Binge drinking (BD) in adolescent rats disrupts hepatic lipid homeostasis, inducing dyslipidemia and cholesteryl ester accumulation. BD alters hepatic cholesterol metabolism and bile acid homeostasis. In addition, it promotes free fatty acid (FFA) accumulation and steatosis. Folic acid supplementation improves cholesterol balance and enhances FFA mobilization, offering a protective role against BD-induced liver damage.
Keywords: adolescence; binge drinking; cholesterol; folic acid; free fatty acids.
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