4 research outputs found
Classification of flavors in cigarillos and little cigars and their variable cellular and acellular oxidative and cytotoxic responses.
Flavored tobacco products are increasing in popularity but remain unregulated, with the exception of the ban on flavored conventional cigarettes. Lack of regulation of cigarillos and little cigars allows vendors to have their own version of popular flavors, each with different chemical components. A new classification system was created for flavored cigars in order to easily communicate our results with the scientific community. To understand the physicochemical characteristics of flavored little cigars and cigarillo smoke, size distribution and concentration of particulate matter in smoke were determined. Acellular reactive oxygen species generation was measured as an indirect measurement of the potential to cause oxidative stress in cells. In addition, cigarillo smoke extract treatment on bronchial epithelial (Beas-2b) cells were assessed to determine the flavor-induced cellular toxicity. Flavored cigars/cigarillos showed significant variability in the tested parameters between flavors as well as brands of the same flavor, but most of the cigars showed higher potential of generating oxidative stress, than research grade cigarettes. Flavored cigars produced maximum particle concentrations at 1.0μm and 4.0 μm compared with 3R4F reference research cigarettes. A differential cytotoxic response was observed with cigarillo smoke extract treatments, with "fruits/candy" and "drinks" being the most toxic, but were not more cytotoxic than smoke from cigarettes. These cigarillos with flavors must be well characterized for toxicity in order to prevent adverse effects caused by exposure to flavor chemicals. Our study provides insight into understanding the potential health effects of flavor-infused cigars/cigarillos and the need for the regulation of those flavoring chemicals in these products. Future research is directed to determine the flavoring toxicity of little cigars and cigarillos in vivo studies
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Dysregulated repair and inflammatory responses by e-cigarette-derived inhaled nicotine and humectant propylene glycol in a sex-dependent manner in mouse lung.
Nicotine inhalation via electronic cigarettes (e-cigs) is an emerging concern. However, little is known about the acute toxicity in the lungs following inhalation of nicotine-containing e-cig aerosols. We hypothesized that acute exposure to aerosolized nicotine causes lung toxicity by eliciting inflammatory and dysregulated repair responses. Adult C57BL/6J mice were exposed 2 h daily for 3 days to e-cig aerosols containing propylene glycol (PG) with or without nicotine. Acute exposure to nicotine-containing e-cig aerosols induced inflammatory cell influx (neutrophils and CD8a+ T-lymphocytes), and release of pro-inflammatory cytokines in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid in a sex-dependent manner. Inhalation of e-cig aerosol containing PG alone significantly augmented the lung levels of various homeostasis/repair mediators (PPARγ, ADRP, ACTA2, CTNNB1, LEF1, β-catenin, E-cadherin, and MMP2) in a sex-dependent manner when compared to air controls. These findings were accompanied by an increase in protein abundance and altered gene expression of lipogenic markers (PPARγ, ADRP) and myogenic markers (fibronectin, α-smooth muscle actin and β-catenin), suggesting a dysregulated repair response in mouse lungs. Furthermore, exposure to nicotine containing e-cig aerosols or PG alone differentially affected the release of pro-inflammatory cytokines in healthy and COPD human 3D EpiAirway tissues. Overall, acute exposure to nicotine containing e-cig aerosols was sufficient to elicit a pro-inflammatory response and altered mRNA and protein levels of myogenic, lipogenic, and extracellular matrix markers in mouse lung in a sex-dependent manner. Thus, acute exposure to inhaled nicotine via e-cig leads to dysregulated repair and inflammatory responses, which may lead to airway remodeling in the lungs