AI Article Synopsis

  • The study compared gene regulation in oral cells between e-cigarette users, smokers, and non-smokers using RNA-sequencing, finding that smokers had more than 50% more differentially expressed genes than vapers.
  • In vapers, a notable portion of deregulated transcripts were non-coding RNAs, while smokers showed a predominance of protein-coding gene dysregulation.
  • Both groups exhibited links to cancer-related pathways, with distinct affected pathways highlighted, indicating overall significant health implications for both vapers and smokers.

Article Abstract

We have investigated the regulation of genes and associated molecular pathways, genome-wide, in oral cells of electronic cigarette (e-cigs) users and cigarette smokers as compared to non-smokers. Interrogation of the oral transcriptome by RNA-sequencing (RNA-seq) analysis showed significant number of aberrantly expressed transcripts in both e-cig users (vapers) and smokers relative to non-smokers; however, smokers had ~50% more differentially expressed transcripts than vapers (1726 versus 1152). Whereas the deregulated transcripts in smokers were predominately from protein-coding genes (79% versus 53% in vapers), nearly 28% of the aberrantly expressed transcripts in vapers (versus 8% in smokers) belonged to regulatory non-coding RNAs, including long intergenic non-coding, antisense, small nucleolar and misc RNA ( < 0.0001). Molecular pathway and functional network analyses revealed that "cancer" was the top disease associated with the deregulated genes in both e-cig users and smokers (~62% versus 79%). Examination of the canonical pathways and networks modulated in either e-cig users or smokers identified the "Wnt/Ca⁺ pathway" in vapers and the "integrin signaling pathway" in smokers as the most affected pathways. Amongst the overlapping functional pathways impacted in both e-cig users and smokers, the "Rho family GTPases signaling pathway" was the top disrupted pathway, although the number of affected targets was three times higher in smokers than vapers. In conclusion, we observed deregulation of critically important genes and associated molecular pathways in the oral epithelium of vapers that bears both resemblances and differences with that of smokers. Our findings have significant implications for public health and tobacco regulatory science.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6386888PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms20030738DOI Listing

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