About this Research Topic
A lot of progress has been made in elucidating the relationship between alcohol consumption and immune function and how it affects human health. However, the mechanisms by which alcohol and its metabolites interacts with peripheral and tissue-resident immune systems remain poorly defined. Defining specific systemic adaptations and molecular mechanisms is important for understanding the long-term consequences of chronic alcohol use. These studies will help devise new interventions or refine existing ones to target the immune system in mitigating alcohol-related diseases.
The aim of this Research Topic is to bring together new research in the alcohol field exploring the broad molecular and cellular adaptations of binge and heavy drinking on peripheral and tissue immunity. Studies would ideally include a combination of in vitro cell line models and in vivo animal models, and/or human studies of alcohol-induced end-organ damage mediated by dysregulated immune responses. Papers in this Research Topic could be used to identify complementary mechanisms and pathways that may be the focus of future therapeutic strategies. We encourage the submission of Original Research articles, as well as Reviews, Mini-Reviews, and Perspectives covering the following or related topics:
1. Innate and adaptive immune adaptations with moderate and heavy drinking.
2. Transcriptional and epigenetic mechanisms of alcohol-associated immune dysfunction
3. Alcohol-microbiome cross-talk and its role on immune function.
4. Alcohol and tissue immunity – impact on barrier function, immune-stromal cell crosstalk.
5. Alcohol and immune responses to vaccines and infections.
6. Impact of alcohol on immune metabolism and mitochondrial dysfunction
7. Sex differences in the impact of heavy drinking on immune responses.
8. Organ-organ interactions and immunity
o Gut-Lung-Liver axis
o Gut-brain axis
o Liver-brain axis
Keywords: Alcohol, Immunity, End-organ damage, Immunometabolism, Epigenetics, Microbiome
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.