Link to bioRxiv paper:
http://biorxiv.org/cgi/content/short/2023.04.06.535946v1?rss=1
Authors: Bhowmik, A. T., Zhao, S. R., Wu, J. C.
Abstract:
Electronic cigarettes (e-cigarettes) have become increasingly popular with adolescents in recent years as a result of aggressive marketing schemes, false safety claims, and appealing flavors targeted towards teens from e-cigarette companies. In the past 8 years alone, e-cigarette use amongst youth has increased by 18 times. Although many dangerous effects of smoking e-cigarettes on lungs have come to light, limited and qualitative effort has been made to analyze the impact of smoking e-cigarettes on the human heart directly. In this study, we determined e-liquid cardiotoxicity in both healthy cells and cells with long QT syndrome by treating healthy and diseased human cardiomyocytes with e-liquids with varying nicotine concentrations. These cardiomyocytes were generated from human induced pluripotent stem cells. The cardiomyocytes were divided into 5 groups, a control group and 4 test groups, each treated with e-liquid containing varying amounts of nicotine between 0% and 70%. The cells' biological indicators such as heart rate, pulse pressure, essential protein concentration, and metabolic activity, were measured, characterized using three different functional assays: contractility, Western blot, and viability, and tracked closely over 2 weeks. The results demonstrated that acute exposure to e-liquid led to tachycardia, hypertension, decreased protein levels, and cell death. The rate of cardiotoxicity increases with higher nicotine concentrations. The basal fluid also showed non-negligible toxicity. Under identical conditions, the functionality of the diseased heart cells declined at a faster rate compared to healthy cells. Overall, this work systematically establishes the harmful physiological effects of e-cigarettes on the human heart quantitatively.
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