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Amelioration strategies fail to prevent tobacco smoke effects on neurodifferentiation: Nicotinic receptor blockade, antioxidants, methyl donors.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Slotkin, TA; Skavicus, S; Card, J; Levin, ED; Seidler, FJ
Published in: Toxicology
July 3, 2015

Tobacco smoke exposure is associated with neurodevelopmental disorders. We used neuronotypic PC12 cells to evaluate the mechanisms by which tobacco smoke extract (TSE) affects neurodifferentiation. In undifferentiated cells, TSE impaired DNA synthesis and cell numbers to a much greater extent than nicotine alone; TSE also impaired cell viability to a small extent. In differentiating cells, TSE enhanced cell growth at the expense of cell numbers and promoted emergence of the dopaminergic phenotype. Nicotinic receptor blockade with mecamylamine was ineffective in preventing the adverse effects of TSE and actually enhanced the effect of TSE on the dopamine phenotype. A mixture of antioxidants (vitamin C, vitamin E, N-acetyl-l-cysteine) provided partial protection against cell loss but also promoted loss of the cholinergic phenotype in response to TSE. Notably, the antioxidants themselves altered neurodifferentiation, reducing cell numbers and promoting the cholinergic phenotype at the expense of the dopaminergic phenotype, an effect that was most prominent for N-acetyl-l-cysteine. Treatment with methyl donors (vitamin B12, folic acid, choline) had no protectant effect and actually enhanced the cell loss evoked by TSE; they did have a minor, synergistic interaction with antioxidants protecting against TSE effects on growth. Thus, components of tobacco smoke perturb neurodifferentiation through mechanisms that cannot be attributed to the individual effects of nicotine, oxidative stress or interference with one-carbon metabolism. Consequently, attempted amelioration strategies may be partially effective at best, or, as seen here, can actually aggravate injury by interfering with normal developmental signals and/or by sensitizing cells to TSE effects on neurodifferentiation.

Duke Scholars

Published In

Toxicology

DOI

EISSN

1879-3185

Publication Date

July 3, 2015

Volume

333

Start / End Page

63 / 75

Location

Ireland

Related Subject Headings

  • Toxicology
  • Smoking
  • Smoke
  • Rats
  • Phenotype
  • PC12 Cells
  • Nicotinic Antagonists
  • Nicotine
  • Neuroprotective Agents
  • Neurons
 

Citation

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Slotkin, T. A., Skavicus, S., Card, J., Levin, E. D., & Seidler, F. J. (2015). Amelioration strategies fail to prevent tobacco smoke effects on neurodifferentiation: Nicotinic receptor blockade, antioxidants, methyl donors. Toxicology, 333, 63–75. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tox.2015.04.005
Slotkin, Theodore A., Samantha Skavicus, Jennifer Card, Edward D. Levin, and Frederic J. Seidler. “Amelioration strategies fail to prevent tobacco smoke effects on neurodifferentiation: Nicotinic receptor blockade, antioxidants, methyl donors.Toxicology 333 (July 3, 2015): 63–75. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tox.2015.04.005.
Slotkin, Theodore A., et al. “Amelioration strategies fail to prevent tobacco smoke effects on neurodifferentiation: Nicotinic receptor blockade, antioxidants, methyl donors.Toxicology, vol. 333, July 2015, pp. 63–75. Pubmed, doi:10.1016/j.tox.2015.04.005.
Journal cover image

Published In

Toxicology

DOI

EISSN

1879-3185

Publication Date

July 3, 2015

Volume

333

Start / End Page

63 / 75

Location

Ireland

Related Subject Headings

  • Toxicology
  • Smoking
  • Smoke
  • Rats
  • Phenotype
  • PC12 Cells
  • Nicotinic Antagonists
  • Nicotine
  • Neuroprotective Agents
  • Neurons