A team of researchers have found that tobacco-free cigarettes may be more carcinogenic by actually inducing more extensive DNA damage than tobacco products
The
research team was led by Zbigniew Darzynkiewicz, M.D., Ph.D., professor of
pathology. Their study, "DNA damage response induced by exposure of human
lung adenocarcinoma cells to smoke from tobacco- and nicotine-free
cigarettes," will appear in the June 1 issue of Cell
Cycle (Volume
9, Issue 11).
Using the
same technique they developed to document the harmful effects of tobacco
products, a team of researchers found that cigarettes made without tobacco or
nicotine may be more carcinogenic because they actually induce more extensive
DNA damage than tobacco products. The technique has been awarded U.S.
patent No. 7,662,565.
The authors
conclude that their methodology to assess the potential carcinogenic properties
of tobacco smoke, based on measurement of DNA damage response as assessed by
LSC, provides a useful addition to the battery of genotoxic tests for probing
cigarette smoke hazards.
Using laser
scanning cytometry (LSC) technology to measure DNA damage response to the smoke
from commercially available tobacco- and nicotine-free cigarettes, the research
team expected to find the alternative products were less hazardous than regular
tobacco cigarettes.
However,
their data suggest that exposure of cells to smoke from tobacco- and
nicotine-free cigarettes leads to formation of double-strand DNA breaks (DSBs).
Since DSBs are potentially carcinogenic, the data indicate that smoking
tobacco- and nicotine-free cigarettes is at least as hazardous as those
containing tobacco and nicotine.
Such tests,
which can be applied to evaluate the effects of cigarettes and cigarette
surrogate products on human health, can be important tools for regulatory
agencies such as the Food and Drug Administration or, in the case of
environmental smoke, by the Environmental Protection Agency.
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