نتایج جستجو برای: cigarette smoke extracts cse

تعداد نتایج: 177106  

Journal: :American journal of respiratory cell and molecular biology 2006
Tomasz K Baginski Karim Dabbagh Chiradath Satjawatcharaphong David C Swinney

Pathogenic factors associated with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), such as cigarette smoke, proinflammatory cytokines, and bacterial infections, can individually induce respiratory mucins in vitro and in vivo. Since co-presence of these factors is common in lungs of patients with COPD, we hypothesized that cigarette smoke can amplify mucin induction by bacterial exoproducts and pr...

2016
Jeffrey S. Bourgeois Jeeva Jacob Aram Garewal Renata Ndahayo Julia Paxson

Cellular exposure to cigarette smoke leads to an array of complex responses including apoptosis, cellular senescence, telomere dysfunction, cellular aging, and neoplastic transformation. To study the cellular response to cigarette smoke, a common in vitro model exposes cultured cells to a nominal concentration (i.e. initial concentration) of soluble cigarette smoke extract (CSE). However, we re...

2017
Minghui Ji Yudong Zhang Na Li Chao Wang Rong Xia Zhan Zhang Shou-Lin Wang

Cytochrome P450 2A13 (CYP2A13), an extrahepatic enzyme mainly expressed in the human respiratory system, has been reported to mediate the metabolism and toxicity of cigarette smoke. We previously found that nicotine inhibited 4-(methylnitrosamino)-1-(3-pyridyl)-1-butanone (NNK) metabolism by CYP2A13, but its influence on other components of cigarette smoke remains unclear. The nicotine componen...

2017
Wahiba Dhahri Sylvie Dussault Paola Haddad Julie Turgeon Sophie Tremblay Kevin Rolland Michel Desjarlais Katia Y Cáceres-Gorriti Raphael Mathieu Alain Rivard

This study sought to determine the potential role of microRNAs (miRNAs) in the detrimental effects of cigarette smoke on angiogenesis and neovascularization. Using large-scale miRNA profiling and qRT-PCR analyses, we identified let-7f as a pro-angiogenic miRNA which expression is significantly reduced in HUVECs treated with cigarette smoke extracts (CSE), and in the ischemic muscles of mice tha...

2015
Fabio Bucchieri Antonella Marino Gammazza Alessandro Pitruzzella Alberto Fucarino Felicia Farina Peter Howarth Stephen T. Holgate Giovanni Zummo Donna E. Davies

BACKGROUND Epidemiologic studies have demonstrated important links between air pollution and asthma. Amongst these pollutants, environmental cigarette smoke is a risk factor both for asthma pathogenesis and exacerbation. As the barrier to the inhaled environment, the bronchial epithelium is a key structure that is exposed to cigarette smoke. OBJECTIVES Since primary bronchial epithelial cells...

Journal: :American journal of physiology. Lung cellular and molecular physiology 2006
Carolyn J Baglole Seth M Bushinsky Tatiana M Garcia Aruna Kode Irfan Rahman Patricia J Sime Richard P Phipps

Cigarette smoke is the principal cause of emphysema. Recent attention has focused on the loss of alveolar fibroblasts in the development of emphysema. Fibroblasts may become damaged by oxidative stress and undergo apoptosis as a result of cigarette smoke exposure. Not all smokers develop lung diseases associated with tobacco smoke, a fact that may reflect individual variation among human fibrob...

2015
Mark E. Wylam Venkatachalem Sathish Sarah Kay VanOosten Michelle Freeman David Burkholder Michael A. Thompson Christina M. Pabelick Y. S. Prakash Laszlo Csernoch

Cigarette smoke contributes to or exacerbates airway diseases such as asthma and COPD, where airway hyperresponsiveness and airway smooth muscle (ASM) proliferation are key features. While factors such as inflammation contribute to asthma in part by enhancing agonist-induced intracellular Ca(2+) ([Ca(2+)]i) responses of ASM, the mechanisms by which cigarette smoke affect ASM are still under inv...

Journal: :Journal of immunology 2005
Robert Vassallo Koji Tamada Julie S Lau Paula R Kroening Lieping Chen

Dendritic cells (DC) are key regulators of immune responses. In the current study, we hypothesized that cigarette smoke-induced aberrance in DC function is an important mechanism by which smokers develop cancer, infection, and allergy--diseases common in smokers. We demonstrate that cigarette smoke extract (CSE) inhibits DC-mediated priming of T cells, specifically inhibiting the secretion of I...

Journal: :Cancer research 2006
Ayumi Kasai Nobuhiko Hiramatsu Kunihiro Hayakawa Jian Yao Shuichiro Maeda Masanori Kitamura

Cigarette smoke contains low levels of agonists for the aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AhR; also called the dioxin receptor). However, little is understood about the whole potential of cigarette smoke for activating AhR. In this report, we evaluated the total "dioxin-like" activity of cigarette smoke using in vitro and in vivo reporter systems. Cigarette smoke extract (CSE) was prepared from seven ...

Journal: :American journal of physiology. Lung cellular and molecular physiology 2012
Sun-Yong Kim Ji-Hyun Lee Hyo Jeong Kim Mi Kyeong Park Jin Won Huh Jai Youl Ro Yeon-Mok Oh Sang-Do Lee Yun-Song Lee

Cigarette smoking causes apoptotic death, senescence, and impairment of repair functions in lung fibroblasts, which maintain the integrity of alveolar structure by producing extracellular matrix (ECM) proteins. Therefore, recovery of lung fibroblasts from cigarette smoke-induced damage may be crucial in regeneration of emphysematous lung resulting from degradation of ECM proteins and subsequent...

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