ResearchPublications

Electronic cigarette aerosol modulates the oral microbiome and increases risk of infection
Abstract

The trend of e-cigarette use among teens is ever increasing. Here we show the dysbiotic oral microbial ecology in e-cigarette users influencing the local host immune environment compared with non-smoker controls and cigarette smokers. Using 16S rRNA high-throughput sequencing, we evaluated 119 human participants, 40 in each of the three cohorts, and found significantly altered beta-diversity in e-cigarette users (p = 0.006) when compared with never smokers or tobacco cigarette smokers. The abundance of Porphyromonas and Veillonella (p = 0.008) was higher among vapers. Interleukin (IL)-6 and IL-1beta were highly elevated in e-cigarette users when compared with non-users. Epithelial cell-exposed e-cigarette aerosols were more susceptible for infection. In vitro infection model of premalignant Leuk-1 and malignant cell lines exposed to e-cigarette aerosol and challenged by Porphyromonas gingivalis and Fusobacterium nucleatum resulted in elevated inflammatory response. Our findings for the first time demonstrate that e-cigarette users are more prone to infection.

Download PDF

Full citation:
Pushalkar S, Paul B, Li Q, ..., Shelley D, et al. (2020).
Electronic cigarette aerosol modulates the oral microbiome and increases risk of infection
iScience, 23 (3), 100884. doi: 10.1016/j.isci.2020.100884. PMCID: PMC7113564.