Use of the zebrafish larvae as a model to study cigarette smoke condensate toxicity.

The smoking of tobacco continues to be the leading cause of premature death worldwide and is linked to the development of a number of serious illnesses including heart disease, respiratory diseases, stroke and cancer. Currently, cell line based toxicity assays are typically used to gain information...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Lee D Ellis, Evelyn C Soo, John C Achenbach, Michael G Morash, Kelly H Soanes
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2014-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4272283?pdf=render
id doaj-df3f1cd27a914cd49ca54213c676db0b
record_format Article
spelling doaj-df3f1cd27a914cd49ca54213c676db0b2020-11-25T02:45:39ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032014-01-01912e11530510.1371/journal.pone.0115305Use of the zebrafish larvae as a model to study cigarette smoke condensate toxicity.Lee D EllisEvelyn C SooJohn C AchenbachMichael G MorashKelly H SoanesThe smoking of tobacco continues to be the leading cause of premature death worldwide and is linked to the development of a number of serious illnesses including heart disease, respiratory diseases, stroke and cancer. Currently, cell line based toxicity assays are typically used to gain information on the general toxicity of cigarettes and other tobacco products. However, they provide little information regarding the complex disease-related changes that have been linked to smoking. The ethical concerns and high cost associated with mammalian studies have limited their widespread use for in vivo toxicological studies of tobacco. The zebrafish has emerged as a low-cost, high-throughput, in vivo model in the study of toxicology. In this study, smoke condensates from 2 reference cigarettes and 6 Canadian brands of cigarettes with different design features were assessed for acute, developmental, cardiac, and behavioural toxicity (neurotoxicity) in zebrafish larvae. By making use of this multifaceted approach we have developed an in vivo model with which to compare the toxicity profiles of smoke condensates from cigarettes with different design features. This model system may provide insights into the development of smoking related disease and could provide a cost-effective, high-throughput platform for the future evaluation of tobacco products.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4272283?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lee D Ellis
Evelyn C Soo
John C Achenbach
Michael G Morash
Kelly H Soanes
spellingShingle Lee D Ellis
Evelyn C Soo
John C Achenbach
Michael G Morash
Kelly H Soanes
Use of the zebrafish larvae as a model to study cigarette smoke condensate toxicity.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Lee D Ellis
Evelyn C Soo
John C Achenbach
Michael G Morash
Kelly H Soanes
author_sort Lee D Ellis
title Use of the zebrafish larvae as a model to study cigarette smoke condensate toxicity.
title_short Use of the zebrafish larvae as a model to study cigarette smoke condensate toxicity.
title_full Use of the zebrafish larvae as a model to study cigarette smoke condensate toxicity.
title_fullStr Use of the zebrafish larvae as a model to study cigarette smoke condensate toxicity.
title_full_unstemmed Use of the zebrafish larvae as a model to study cigarette smoke condensate toxicity.
title_sort use of the zebrafish larvae as a model to study cigarette smoke condensate toxicity.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2014-01-01
description The smoking of tobacco continues to be the leading cause of premature death worldwide and is linked to the development of a number of serious illnesses including heart disease, respiratory diseases, stroke and cancer. Currently, cell line based toxicity assays are typically used to gain information on the general toxicity of cigarettes and other tobacco products. However, they provide little information regarding the complex disease-related changes that have been linked to smoking. The ethical concerns and high cost associated with mammalian studies have limited their widespread use for in vivo toxicological studies of tobacco. The zebrafish has emerged as a low-cost, high-throughput, in vivo model in the study of toxicology. In this study, smoke condensates from 2 reference cigarettes and 6 Canadian brands of cigarettes with different design features were assessed for acute, developmental, cardiac, and behavioural toxicity (neurotoxicity) in zebrafish larvae. By making use of this multifaceted approach we have developed an in vivo model with which to compare the toxicity profiles of smoke condensates from cigarettes with different design features. This model system may provide insights into the development of smoking related disease and could provide a cost-effective, high-throughput platform for the future evaluation of tobacco products.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4272283?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT leedellis useofthezebrafishlarvaeasamodeltostudycigarettesmokecondensatetoxicity
AT evelyncsoo useofthezebrafishlarvaeasamodeltostudycigarettesmokecondensatetoxicity
AT johncachenbach useofthezebrafishlarvaeasamodeltostudycigarettesmokecondensatetoxicity
AT michaelgmorash useofthezebrafishlarvaeasamodeltostudycigarettesmokecondensatetoxicity
AT kellyhsoanes useofthezebrafishlarvaeasamodeltostudycigarettesmokecondensatetoxicity
_version_ 1724761239708499968