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Home › Dataset Library › Cigarette Smoking Induces Overexpression of a Fat Depleting Gene AZGP1 in the Human Airway Epithelium

Dataset: Cigarette Smoking Induces Overexpression of a Fat Depleting Gene AZGP1 in the Human Airway Epithelium

Smokers weigh less and have less body fat than non-smokers, and increased body fat and weight gain are observed following smoking...

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Smokers weigh less and have less body fat than non-smokers, and increased body fat and weight gain are observed following smoking cessation. To assess a possible molecular mechanism underlying the inverse association between smoking and body weight, we hypothesized that smoking may induce the expression of a fat depleting gene in the airway epithelium, the cell population that takes the brunt of the stress of cigarette smoke. As a candidate gene we evaluated the expression of alpha2-zinc-glycoprotein1 (AZGP1), a soluble protein that stimulates lipolysis, induces a reduction in body fat in mice and is associated with the cachexia related to cancer, and is known to be expressed in secretory cells of lung epithelium. To assess if smoking upregulates AZGP1 expression, microarray analysis with TaqMan confirmation was used to evaluate large airway epithelial samples obtained by fiberoptic bronchoscopy from 37 normal smokers and 55 normal nonsmokers. Both microarray and TaqMan analysis demonstrated that AZGP1 mRNA levels were higher in the large airway epithelium of normal smokers compared to normal nonsmokers (p<0.05, all comparisons). Western analysis of airway biopsies of smokers compared with nonsmokers demonstrated upregulation of AZGP1 at the protein level, and immunohistochemical analysis demonstrated upregulation of AZGP1 in secretory as well as neuroendocrine cells of smokers. In the context that AZGP1 is involved in lipolysis and fat loss, its overexpression in the airway epithelium of chronic smokers may represent one mechanism for the weight difference in smokers vs nonsmokers. Keywords: Comparison of gene expression in large airway epithleium of normal non-smokers and normal smokers Airway epithelial cells obtained by bronchoscopy with brushing from healthy smokers and healthy non-smokers

Species:
human

Samples:
11

Source:
E-GEOD-10135

PubMed:
19188554

Updated:
Jan.17, 2015

Registered:
Jan.17, 2015


Factors: (via ArrayExpress)
Sample AGE ETHNIC GROUP SMOKING STATUS SEX
GSM114078 1 33 White smoker, 20 pack-years female
GSM114079 1 37 Black smoker, 23 pack-years female
GSM114080 1 48 White smoker, 30 pack-years male
GSM114081 1 38 White smoker, 20 pack-years male
GSM114082 1 42 Black smoker, 24 pack-years male
GSM114083 1 36 Hispanic smoker, 25 pack-years male
GSM114084 1 29 Hispanic non-smoker female
GSM114085 1 34 Black non-smoker male
GSM114086 1 31 White non-smoker male
GSM114087 1 29 Black non-smoker female
GSM114088 1 38 White non-smoker male

Tags

  • body
  • cancer
  • cell
  • lung
  • protein

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