Gene expression after 1 and 5 days of cigarette smoke exposure in mice with chronically inflamed or healthy lungs
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ABSTRACT: These studies tested the hypotheses that smoke induces changes in mRNA profiles that are dependent on sex and the health status of the lung, and that the effects of smoke are different after 1 day compared to 5 days of smoke exposure. The ways in which the lungs modulate their response to cigarette smoke after repeated exposures are important for understanding the toxicology of smoke, for developing biomarkers of chronic smoke exposure, and for understanding the therapeutic potential in regulatory signaling pathways that are beneficial or detrimental to lung health. Sex-matched 5-7-week old wildtype (WT) and Scnn1b-overexpressing (BENaC) littermates were exposed to cigarette smoke or sham (room air) exposure. Exposure occurred in a plexiglass chamber attached to a smoke delivery device using an exposure chamber and smoking machine (inExpose Exposure System, SCIREQ, Chandler, AZ). Mice were exposed to mainstream + sidestream smoke from 6 reference cigarettes with filters removed per day (3R4F research cigarettes, University of Kentucky). Each cigarette was puffed for 2 sec every 25 sec, using the standard Federal Trade Commission smoking machine protocol. The sham-exposed control mice were exposed to room air in the exposure chamber for a time equivalent to that needed for active smoke exposure. Mice were exposed to cigarette or sham smoke for 1 day or 5 consecutive days. Samples were harvested 4 hours after the completion of the final smoke exposure. The right lung was used for gene expression analysis.
ORGANISM(S): Mus musculus
PROVIDER: GSE109776 | GEO | 2019/03/18
REPOSITORIES: GEO
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