4.5 Article

Menthol flavoring in e-cigarette condensate causes pulmonary dysfunction and cytotoxicity in precision cut lung slices

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AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/ajplung.00222.2022

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e-cigarettes; lung toxicity; menthol; nicotine; PCLS; precision cut lung slices

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The consumption of e-cigarettes is being regulated due to concerns about toxicity, manufacturing standards, and lung injury. Studies have shown toxicity and oxidative stress caused by e-cigarette aerosols and additives. However, the effects of e-cigarettes on lung tissue are still unclear.
E-cigarette consumption is under scrutiny by regulatory authorities due to concerns about product toxicity, lack of manufacturing standards, and increasing reports of e -cigarette-or vaping-associated acute lung injury. In vitro studies have demonstrated cyto-toxicity, mitochondrial dysfunction, and oxidative stress induced by unflavored e-cigarette aerosols and flavoring additives. However, e-cigarette effects on the complex lung parenchyma remain unclear. Herein, the impact of e-cigarette condensates with or without menthol flavoring on functional, structural, and cellular responses was investigated using mouse precision cut lung slices (PCLS). PCLS were exposed to e-cigarette condensates prepared from aerosolized vehicle, nicotine, nicotine + men-thol, and menthol e -fluids at doses from 50 to 500 mM. Doses were normalized to the glycerin content of vehicle. Video -micros-copy of PCLS revealed impaired contractile responsiveness of airways to methacholine and dampened ciliary beating following exposure to menthol-containing condensates at concentrations greater than 300 mM. Following 500 mM menthol-containing condensate exposure, epithelial exfoliation in intrabronchial airways was identified in histological sections of PCLS. Measurement of lactate dehydrogenase release, mitochondrial water-soluble-tetrazolium salt-1 conversion, and glutathione content supported earlier findings of nicotine or nicotine + menthol e-cigarette-induced dose-dependent cytotoxicity and oxidative stress responses. Evaluation of PCLS metabolic activity revealed dose-related impairment of mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation and glycolysis after exposure to menthol-containing condensates. Taken together, these data demonstrate prominent menthol -induced pulmonary toxicity and impairment of essential physiological functions in the lung, which warrants concerns about e -cig-arette consumer safety and emphasizes the need for further investigations of molecular mechanisms of toxicity and menthol effects in an experimental model of disease.

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