Lin_2019_Am.J.Respir.Cell.Mol.Biol_61_162

Reference

Title : Vaporized E-Cigarette Liquids Induce Ion Transport Dysfunction in Airway Epithelia - Lin_2019_Am.J.Respir.Cell.Mol.Biol_61_162
Author(s) : Lin VY , Fain MD , Jackson PL , Berryhill TF , Wilson LS , Mazur M , Barnes SJ , Blalock JE , Raju SV , Rowe SM
Ref : American Journal of Respiratory Cellular & Molecular Biology , 61 :162 , 2019
Abstract :

Cigarette smoking is associated with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and chronic bronchitis. Acquired ion transport abnormalities, including cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) dysfunction, caused by cigarette smoking have been proposed as potential mechanisms for mucus obstruction in chronic bronchitis. Although e-cigarette use is popular and perceived to be safe, whether it harms the airways via mechanisms altering ion transport remains unclear. In the present study, we sought to determine if e-cigarette vapor, like cigarette smoke, has the potential to induce acquired CFTR dysfunction, and to what degree. Electrophysiological methods demonstrated reduced chloride transport caused by vaporized e-cigarette liquid or vegetable glycerin at various exposures (30 min, 57.2% and 14.4% respectively, vs. control; P < 0.0001), but not by unvaporized liquid (60 min, 17.6% vs. untreated), indicating that thermal degradation of these products is required to induce the observed defects. We also observed reduced ATP-dependent responses (-10.8 +/- 3.0 vs. -18.8 +/- 5.1 muA/cm(2) control) and epithelial sodium channel activity (95.8% reduction) in primary human bronchial epithelial cells after 5 minutes, suggesting that exposures dramatically inhibit epithelial ion transport beyond CFTR, even without diminished transepithelial resistance or cytotoxicity. Vaporizing e-cigarette liquid produced reactive aldehydes, including acrolein (shown to induce acquired CFTR dysfunction), as quantified by mass spectrometry, demonstrating that respiratory toxicants in cigarette smoke can also be found in e-cigarette vapor (30 min air, 224.5 +/- 15.99; unvaporized liquid, 284.8 +/- 35.03; vapor, 54,468 +/- 3,908 ng/ml; P < 0.0001). E-cigarettes can induce ion channel dysfunction in airway epithelial cells, partly through acrolein production. These findings indicate a heretofore unknown toxicity of e-cigarette use known to be associated with chronic bronchitis onset and progression, as well as with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease severity.

PubMedSearch : Lin_2019_Am.J.Respir.Cell.Mol.Biol_61_162
PubMedID: 30576219

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Citations formats

Lin VY, Fain MD, Jackson PL, Berryhill TF, Wilson LS, Mazur M, Barnes SJ, Blalock JE, Raju SV, Rowe SM (2019)
Vaporized E-Cigarette Liquids Induce Ion Transport Dysfunction in Airway Epithelia
American Journal of Respiratory Cellular & Molecular Biology 61 :162

Lin VY, Fain MD, Jackson PL, Berryhill TF, Wilson LS, Mazur M, Barnes SJ, Blalock JE, Raju SV, Rowe SM (2019)
American Journal of Respiratory Cellular & Molecular Biology 61 :162