4.7 Article

Interactive Effects of Copper and Functional Substances in Wine on Alcoholic Hepatic Injury in Mice

Journal

FOODS
Volume 11, Issue 16, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/foods11162383

Keywords

copper; wine; polyphenols; liver; liver protection; alcoholic damage

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation [31801560]
  2. Shaanxi Key Research and Development Program [2022ZDLNY04-04, 2022NY-039, 2020-TD47]
  3. Ningxia Key Research and Development Program [2021AAC02023, 2022AAC03438, 2022BBF03018]

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This study analyzed the interaction between copper and functional substances in wine and its effect on alcoholic liver injury in mice at different drinking amounts. It found that wine can alleviate alcoholic liver damage caused by ethyl alcohol. Low concentrations of copper in wine had minimal impact on liver injury, while high concentrations of copper significantly aggravated the injury. Therefore, it is crucial to strengthen control over copper content in wine and regulatory inspections to protect consumer health.
This study analyzed the interaction between copper and functional substances in wine under different drinking amounts on alcoholic liver injury in mice. When the daily drinking amount reached 500 mL/60 kg/day (14% abv) with just ethyl alcohol, the liver aspartate aminotransferase, alanine aminotransferase, and total triglyceride levels of mice were significantly increased to 130.71 U/L, 37.45 U/L, 2.55 U/L, the total antioxidant capacity, catalase, and glutathione level decreased significantly to 1.01 U/mL, 30.20 U/mgprot, and 2.10 U/mgprot, and the liver became gradually damaged. Wine could alleviate and reduce the damage caused by ethyl alcohol well. Low concentrations of copper (0.33, 0.66 mg/L) in wine hardly caused hepatic injury in mice and only significantly improved the aspartate aminotransferase values (109.21 U/L, 127.29 U/L) of serum. Combined with the staining evidence, in the case of medium and high intragastric doses (>= 500 mL/60 kg/day), 0.99 mg/L copper (the maximum allowed by China's national standards) in wine began to damage the liver, indicating that under this concentration, the damage of copper to the liver had begun to exceed the protective effect of wine's functional substances on alcoholic hepatic injury. At all experimental doses, high concentrations (1.33 mg/L, 2.00 mg/L) of copper significantly aggravated alcoholic hepatic injury in mice, indicating that high concentrations of copper have a great toxicological risk. In the future, it is necessary to further strengthen the control of copper content in wine and the inspection of market wines in order to protect the health of consumers.

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