| Literature DB >> 28452951 |
Bo Hang1, Pin Wang2,3, Yue Zhao4, Altaf Sarker5, Ahmed Chenna6, Yankai Xia7, Antoine M Snijders8, Jian-Hua Mao9.
Abstract
The newly identified smoke hazard, thirdhand smoke (THS), has gained public attention in recent years but its health impact and biological effects are largely unknown. THS may be defined by "the four Rs": tobacco chemicals that remain, react, re-emit, and/or are resuspended long after active smoking has ceased. This review summarizes recent research progress in the effects of THS on genotoxicity, metabolism and early life development using cellular and animal models. We first reported that THS generated in laboratory systems caused significant DNA damage in human cell lines. Our finding that THS significantly induces oxidative base lesions has been confirmed in skin wounds of mice models exposed to THS. THS also induced metabolomic changes in human reproductive cell lines. Furthermore, we demonstrated that early exposure to THS not only negatively impacts body weight in both male and female mice, but also induces persistent changes to immunological parameters in peripheral blood in these mice. These results indicate that THS is genotoxic at realistic experimental doses and that there may be a window of susceptibility for some forms of cellular damage induced by THS.Entities:
Keywords: DNA adducts; DNA damage; DNA strand breaks; animal studies; early exposure; genotoxicity; health impact; secondhand smoke; thirdhand smoke; tobacco control
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28452951 PMCID: PMC5454845 DOI: 10.3390/ijms18050932
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Schematic representation of the main approaches and models proposed for current and future studies on thirdhand smoke (THS)-induced biological and health effects.
Figure 2Parallelogram strategy that will employ integrative mouse and human systems biology to investigate long-term health effects of exposure to THS. Solid arrows indicate that the data support each other. The dashed arrow on the right indicates that the results from the cell system can infer the human population-based study.