Maternal thirdhand exposure to e-cigarette vapor alters lung and bone marrow immune cell responses in offspring in the absence or presence of influenza infection.

Autor: Donovan, Chantal, Thorpe, Andrew E., Yarak, Rochelle, Coward-Smith, Madison, Pillar, Amber L., Gomez, Henry M., Feng, Min, Bai, Xu, Wang, Meng, Xenaki, Dia, Horvat, Jay C., Chen, Hui, Oliver, Brian G. G., Kim, Richard Y.
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Zdroj: American Journal of Physiology: Lung Cellular & Molecular Physiology; Nov2024, Vol. 327 Issue 5, pL796-L806, 11p
Abstrakt: There is increasing evidence that thirdhand exposure to e-cigarette vapor (e-vapor) can have detrimental effects on the lungs. However, whether maternal exposure during pregnancy results in harmful changes to the offspring is unknown. Using two different e-cigarette settings (low vs. high power), BALB/c mice were subjected to thirdhand e-vapor (e-vapor deposited onto towels, towels changed daily) in the absence or presence of nicotine, before, during, and after pregnancy. Male adult offspring were then infected with mouse-adapted influenza A virus (A/PR/8/34 H1N1; Flu) and lung and bone marrow immune cell responses were assessed 7 days postinfection. Maternal thirdhand exposure to low-power (MLP) or high-power (MHP) e-vapor with nicotine (MLP + NIC and MHP + NIC, respectively) increased the percentage of lung immune cells and neutrophils in the bone marrow. Interestingly, Flu-infected offspring from MLP + NIC and MHP + NIC groups had lower percentages of lung alveolar macrophages and more pronounced increases in neutrophils in the bone marrow, when compared with offspring from MSham Flu controls. Flu infection also decreased the percentage of lung CD4+ T cells and increased the percentage of lung CD8+ T cells, irrespective of maternal exposure (MLP −/+ NIC and MHP −/+ NIC). Significantly, both MLP + NIC and MHP + NIC resulted in blunted activation of lung CD4+ T cells, but only MLP + NIC caused blunted activation of lung CD8+ T cells. Together, we show for the first time that maternal thirdhand exposure to e-vapor results in significant, long-lived effects on lung and bone marrow immune cell responses in offspring at baseline and response to Flu infection. NEW & NOTEWORTHY: Maternal exposure to environmental residues of e-cigarette use has significant effects on immune cell responses in the lungs and bone marrow of offspring at both baseline and in response to influenza A virus (Flu) infection. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Databáze: Complementary Index