E-cigarette Vaping is Associated with Pro-Fibrotic Gene Expression in Kidney and Liver Tissues
Wanjun Gu, Howard Chang, Poorvi Saini, Samvel Gaboyan, Jarod Olay, Jorge A. Masso-Silva, John Shin, Ira Advani, Ashley Du, Cameron Brand, Joan Heller Brown, Laura E. Crotty Alexander

TL;DR
E-cigarette vaping is linked to gene changes in mouse kidneys and livers that suggest fibrosis and metabolic issues.
Contribution
The study reveals pro-fibrotic gene expression patterns in kidney and liver tissues due to e-cigarette exposure.
Findings
E-cigarette vapor exposure alters gene expression in kidney and liver tissues.
Nicotine and vehicle chemicals induce distinct transcriptomic changes in these organs.
Altered genes suggest oxidative stress, inflammation, and metabolic disruptions.
Abstract
Conventional tobacco use causes a wealth of diseases and adversely affects cells and organ systems across the body. The long-term effects of e-cigarette vaping on the same remain unclear and identifying early pathogenic signals at the organ level via animal models may shed light on potential downstream effects in humans. Here we investigate transcriptomic changes in the kidney and liver, organs known to be damaged by long-term combustible tobacco use, of mice exposed daily to e-cigarette aerosols (vapor) with or without nicotine. C57BL/6 male 6–8 week-old mice underwent whole-body exposure to room air, e-cigarette (3rd generation box mod) vapor containing 70:30 propylene glycol and glycerin (70:30 PG:Gly) without nicotine (Vehicle), and e-cigarette vapor with 6 mg/mL nicotine in 70:30 PG:Gly (E-cig) for 1 hour daily for 3 months. RNA sequencing on kidney and liver tissues and apriori…
Genes, proteins, chemicals, diseases, species, mutations and cell lines named across the full text — each resolved to its canonical identifier and authoritative record.
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Taxonomy
TopicsLiver Disease Diagnosis and Treatment · Endoplasmic Reticulum Stress and Disease · Diet, Metabolism, and Disease
