Dangers of Second-Generation Smoke

Nicotine leaves epigenetic marks on the rat genome that make offspring and grand-offspring more prone to asthma.

Written byBeth Marie Mole
| 1 min read

Register for free to listen to this article
Listen with Speechify
0:00
1:00
Share

Wikimedia, TIFFANY DAWN NICHOLSONPregnant rats given nicotine produced asthmatic pups that went on to produce their own asthmatic pups, despite the absence of nicotine exposure in the third generation, according to a new study. The results suggest that nicotine can leave heritable marks on the genome, which make future offspring more susceptible to respiratory conditions.

The finding “shifts the current asthma paradigm, opening up many new avenues to explore,” the authors wrote in the study, published last week (October 30) in BioMed Central Medicine. It also reinforces the growing body of evidence that epigenetics can serve as a vehicle of heredity for environmentally linked traits. (For a further discussion of this phenomenon, see “Lamarck and the Missing Lnc,” The Scientist, October 2012.)

In the new study, Virender Rehan, of the Los Angeles Biomedical Research Institute, and his colleagues injected pregnant rats with nicotine on the 6th day of their typically 22-day pregnancies. Unsurprisingly, the researchers found that the resulting pups had constricted airways and stiff lungs—telltale signs of asthma. But, that generation of mice, when left to produce their own ...

Interested in reading more?

Become a Member of

The Scientist Logo
Receive full access to more than 35 years of archives, as well as TS Digest, digital editions of The Scientist, feature stories, and much more!
Already a member? Login Here

Related Topics

Meet the Author

Share
February 2026

A Stubborn Gene, a Failed Experiment, and a New Path

When experiments refuse to cooperate, you try again and again. For Rafael Najmanovich, the setbacks ultimately pushed him in a new direction.

View this Issue
Human-Relevant In Vitro Models Enable Predictive Drug Discovery

Advancing Drug Discovery with Complex Human In Vitro Models

Stemcell Technologies
Redefining Immunology Through Advanced Technologies

Redefining Immunology Through Advanced Technologies

Ensuring Regulatory Compliance in AAV Manufacturing with Analytical Ultracentrifugation

Ensuring Regulatory Compliance in AAV Manufacturing with Analytical Ultracentrifugation

Beckman Coulter Logo
Conceptual multicolored vector image of cancer research, depicting various biomedical approaches to cancer therapy

Maximizing Cancer Research Model Systems

bioxcell

Products

Sino Biological Logo

Sino Biological Pioneers Life Sciences Innovation with High-Quality Bioreagents on Inside Business Today with Bill and Guiliana Rancic

Sino Biological Logo

Sino Biological Expands Research Reagent Portfolio to Support Global Nipah Virus Vaccine and Diagnostic Development

Beckman Coulter

Beckman Coulter Life Sciences Partners with Automata to Accelerate AI-Ready Laboratory Automation

Refeyn logo

Refeyn named in the Sunday Times 100 Tech list of the UK’s fastest-growing technology companies