| Literature DB >> 32859723 |
Jude A Frie1, Jacob Underhill1, Bin Zhao2, Giordano de Guglielmo3, Rachel F Tyndale4, Jibran Y Khokhar5.
Abstract
The prevalence of "vaping" has recently seen significant increases in North America, especially in adolescents. However, the behavioral correlates of vaping are largely unexplored. The uptake of existing technologies meant for rodent vapor inhalation remains limited because of a lack of affordability and versatility (ability to be used with a variety of vaporizers). The OpenVape (OV) offers an open-source, low-cost solution that can be used in a variety of research contexts. Here, we present a specific use case, combining the OV apparatus with JUUL e-cigarettes. This apparatus consists of Arduino-operated vacuum pumps that deliver vapor directly from e-cigarettes to exposure chambers. The OV is easy to build and customize for any type of vaporizer (e.g., nicotine pod or tank; cannabis flower or concentrates). To test the OV, we performed biochemical verification and behavioral studies. The behavioral test (conditioned place preference, CPP) was conducted using adolescent and adult animals to assess developmental differences in the rewarding effects of nicotine vapor, as previously observed with injected nicotine. These findings demonstrate that even after brief exposures to nicotine vapor, pharmacologically relevant nicotine and cotinine levels could be detected in plasma, and significant CPP was observed, especially in adolescent rats which showed preference at shorter puff delivery durations (lower nicotine doses) compared with adults. Together, these findings suggest that OV provides an affordable, open-source option for preclinical behavioral research into the effects of vaping.Entities:
Keywords: JUUL; adolescent; e-cigarette; nicotine; reward; vaping
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32859723 PMCID: PMC7598908 DOI: 10.1523/ENEURO.0279-20.2020
Source DB: PubMed Journal: eNeuro ISSN: 2373-2822
Bill of materials
| Component | Quantity | Price | Source of materials |
|---|---|---|---|
| Arduino Uno (with cable) | 1 | $12.99 |
|
| JUUL starter pack | 2 | $129.98 |
|
| H-bridge motor controller | 1 | $1.89 |
|
| DC vacuum motor | 2 | $45.98 |
|
| Solderless breadboard | 1 | $3.49 |
|
| AC/DC converter (with power jack) | 1 | $13.49 |
|
| Jumper cables | 120 | $6.98 |
|
| 8-mm silicone tubing | 1 (3 feet) | $9.09 |
|
| Heat shrink tubing pack | 1 | $6.99 |
|
| Allentown mouse cages | 2 | - | In-Lab |
| 3D-printed nozzles | 2 | - | In-Lab |
| PCB (optional), replaces H-bridge, breadboard, and jumper cables | 1 | - | - |
| Total | $230.88 (CAD) |
Build instructions
| Step | Instructions |
|---|---|
| 1 | Download the code file from |
| 2 | Print the nozzles from |
| 3 | Attach the H-bridge to the breadboard |
| 4 | Wire the Arduino to the system with six “logic” cables, a power cable, and a ground |
| 5 | Connect the two terminals of each motor to the corresponding H-bridge pins ( |
| 6 | Insert two cables into the DC power jack (one for ground and one to power the motors) |
| 7 | Secure a charged and filled JUUL e-cigarette to each of the two motors with heat shrink |
| 8 | On the “out” ports of each motor, tightly heat shrink one end of an 8mm plastic tubes onto it |
| 9 | Heat shrink the 3D-printed nozzles onto the opposite ends of each 8-mm plastic tube and insert the nozzles into the drilled holes on the ends of each of the Allentown mouse cages |
| 10 | Plug the Arduino board into your computer and using the Arduino IDE, upload the appropriate code onto the board |
| 11 | Plug both the Arduino and the adjustable voltage supply into a receptacle. The cable to the Arduino will automatically supply the desired voltage to the board |
| 12 | Adjust the voltage supply to 6 V, and vapor clouds will appear at the specified intervals |
Figure 1.Labeled schematic of the OV system.
Figure 2.Wiring diagram for OV apparatus.
Figure 3.Custom PCB design to facilitate building the OV apparatus.
Figure 4.Visual schematic outlining the CPP paradigm. Figure made using BioRender.
Figure 5.Plasma concentrations for nicotine (left) and cotinine (right) at 10 or 120 min after termination of a 10-min total exposure session during which vapor was delivered for one of 2, 4, or 8 min. Data represented as mean ± standard error of the mean (SEM); #p < 0.0001 120- versus 10-min time point; *p < 0.05 dose trend.
Statistical table
| Data structure | Type of test | Power | |
|---|---|---|---|
| a | Normal | Two-way ANOVA | 0.217 |
| b | Normal | Two-way ANOVA | 0.134 |
| c | Normal | Two-way ANOVA | 0.198 |
| d | Normal | Two-way ANOVA | 0.999 |
| e | Normal | Two-way ANOVA | 0.577 |
| f | Normal | Two-way ANOVA | 0.573 |
| g | Normal | Linear contrast | 0.713 |
| h | Normal | One-sample | 0.866 |
| i | Normal | One-sample | 0.996 |
| j | Normal | One-sample | 1.000 |
| k | Normal | Two-way ANOVA | 0.864 |
| l | Normal | Two-way ANOVA | 0.969 |
| m | Normal | Two-way ANOVA | 0.337 |
| n | Normal | Linear contrast | 0.935 |
| o | Normal | One-sample | 0.956 |
| p | Normal | Two-way ANOVA | 0.777 |
| q | Normal | Two-way ANOVA | 0.176 |
| r | Normal | Two-way ANOVA | 0.051 |
Figure 6.Nicotine vapor CPP in adult and adolescent (PND30–PND39) rats; *p < 0.0125 postconditioned versus preconditioned (Bonferroni corrected). Data represented as mean ± SEM.