Janne Heikkinen , Sanna Palosaari , Petri Lehenkari
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background
Smoking and nicotine impose detrimental health effects including adipose tissue dysfunction. Despite extensive physiological evidence, the cellular mechanisms remain poorly understood, with few studies examining the effects of cigarette smoke extract (CSE) or nicotine on adipocyte differentiation.
Methods
Primary human bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs) were exposed to CSE or nicotine (50–500 ng/ml) during adipogenic differentiation. Cell viability and metabolic activity were assessed via MTT assay. Lipid droplet accumulation was evaluated using Sudan III staining and quantitative image analysis. Adiponectin, IL6, and IL8 concentrations were measured after 35 days using ELISA.
Results
At these doses, CSE and nicotine do not immediately affect cell viability but inhibit undifferentiated cell proliferation. Notably, both agents at 50 ng/ml significantly increased lipid accumulation during adipogenesis, while higher CSE doses nearly completely inhibited this process. Additionally, CSE dose-dependently decreased adiponectin secretion and increased IL6 and IL8, indicating a shift towards an inflammatory state. Nicotine alone primarily increased IL6 secretion with less pronounced effects.
Conclusion
The study highlights the complex impact of CSE and nicotine on adipocyte function during early differentiation from MSCs. Dose-dependent changes in lipid accumulation, cytokine, and adiponectin secretion induced by CSE and nicotine can partly explain smoking-related adipose tissue dysfunction.
期刊介绍:
Toxicology in Vitro publishes original research papers and reviews on the application and use of in vitro systems for assessing or predicting the toxic effects of chemicals and elucidating their mechanisms of action. These in vitro techniques include utilizing cell or tissue cultures, isolated cells, tissue slices, subcellular fractions, transgenic cell cultures, and cells from transgenic organisms, as well as in silico modelling. The Journal will focus on investigations that involve the development and validation of new in vitro methods, e.g. for prediction of toxic effects based on traditional and in silico modelling; on the use of methods in high-throughput toxicology and pharmacology; elucidation of mechanisms of toxic action; the application of genomics, transcriptomics and proteomics in toxicology, as well as on comparative studies that characterise the relationship between in vitro and in vivo findings. The Journal strongly encourages the submission of manuscripts that focus on the development of in vitro methods, their practical applications and regulatory use (e.g. in the areas of food components cosmetics, pharmaceuticals, pesticides, and industrial chemicals). Toxicology in Vitro discourages papers that record reporting on toxicological effects from materials, such as plant extracts or herbal medicines, that have not been chemically characterized.