Abstract

Perinatal nicotine exposure alters offspring lung structure and function; however, the underlying mechanisms remain incompletely understood. Whether epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT), a known contributor to pulmonary pathology, occurs following moderate perinatal nicotine exposure is not known. Pregnant, pair-fed Sprague Dawley rat dams received either placebo (diluent) or nicotine [1 mg/kg, subcutaneously] once daily from embryonic day (e) 6 to postnatal day (PND) 21. Generation 1 (F1) and 3 (F3) offspring lungs were isolated at PND 21, and using Western analysis, q-RT-PCR and immunohistochemistry examined for evidence of EMT. To gain further supportive evidence for nicotine-induced EMT, embryonic day 19 primary rat lung alveolar type II (ATII) cells were cultured and treated with nicotine for 24 hr. Protein levels of α-smooth muscle actin, fibronectin, and calponin (myogenic differentiation markers) increased significantly. However, surfactant proteins B and C, and cholinephosphate cytidylyltransferase-α (epithelial cell markers), as well as the typical markers of EMT, E-cadherin, N-cadherin, and fibroblast specific protein (FSP)-1, in both F1 and F3 generation lungs, showed no significant change between the nicotine exposed and control dams. Immunostaining of lung sections and data from in vitro treated ATII cells strongly supported the Western data. Enhanced myogenic molecular profile, without evidence of EMT, as evidenced by the absence of the loss of E-cadherin or gains in N-cadherin and FSP-1, suggest that perinatal nicotine exposure does not result in EMT, but it leads to myogenesis, which predominantly accounts for the lung phenotype seen in perinatally nicotine exposed rat offspring. Pediatr Pulmonol. 2016;51:1142-1150. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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