Prenatal exposure to electronic-cigarette aerosols leads to sex-dependent pulmonary extracellular-matrix remodeling and myogenesis in offspring mice

Q Wang, IK Sundar, JL Blum, JR Ratner… - American journal of …, 2020 - atsjournals.org
Q Wang, IK Sundar, JL Blum, JR Ratner, JH Lucas, TD Chuang, Y Wang, J Liu, VK Rehan
American journal of respiratory cell and molecular biology, 2020atsjournals.org
Electronic-cigarette (e-cig) vaping is a serious concern, as many pregnant women who vape
consider it safe. However, little is known about the harmful effects of prenatal e-cig exposure
on adult offspring, especially on extracellular-matrix (ECM) deposition and myogenesis in
the lungs of offspring. We evaluated the biochemical and molecular implications of maternal
exposure during pregnancy to e-cig aerosols on the adult offspring of both sexes, with a
particular focus on pulmonary ECM remodeling and myogenesis. Pregnant CD-1 mice were …
Electronic-cigarette (e-cig) vaping is a serious concern, as many pregnant women who vape consider it safe. However, little is known about the harmful effects of prenatal e-cig exposure on adult offspring, especially on extracellular-matrix (ECM) deposition and myogenesis in the lungs of offspring. We evaluated the biochemical and molecular implications of maternal exposure during pregnancy to e-cig aerosols on the adult offspring of both sexes, with a particular focus on pulmonary ECM remodeling and myogenesis. Pregnant CD-1 mice were exposed to e-cig aerosols with or without nicotine, throughout gestation, and lungs were collected from adult male and female offspring. Compared with the air-exposed control group, female mice exposed to e-cig aerosols, with or without nicotine, demonstrated increased lung protein abundance of LEF-1 (lymphoid enhancer–binding factor 1), fibronectin, and E-cadherin, whereas altered E-cadherin and PPARγ (peroxisome proliferator–activated receptor γ) levels were observed only in males exposed to e-cig aerosols with nicotine. Moreover, lipogenic and myogenic mRNAs were dysregulated in adult offspring in a sex-dependent manner. PAI-1 (plasminogen activator inhibitor-1), one of the ECM regulators, was significantly increased in females exposed prenatally to e-cig aerosols with nicotine and in males exposed to e-cig aerosols compared with control animals exposed to air. MMP9 (matrix metalloproteinase 9), a downstream target of PAI-1, was downregulated in both sexes exposed to e-cig aerosols with nicotine. No differences in lung histology were observed among any of the treatment groups. Overall, adult mice exposed prenatally to e-cig aerosols could be predisposed to developing pulmonary disease later in life. Thus, these findings suggest that vaping during pregnancy is unsafe and increases the propensity for later-life interstitial lung diseases.
ATS Journals