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One
puff of smoke can damage DNA
Researchers say mutated
cells increase risk of cancer, heart disease
Reuters - WASHINGTON
- Just one puff of a cigarette could damage a smoker’s DNA, the
first step to cancer and heart disease, researchers said.
It obviously takes
more than that to cause disease, but the team at the University
of Pittsburgh were surprised at how little smoke it took to do the
initial damage.
William
Saunders and colleagues studied the effects of real cigarette smoke
on human fibroblasts, common cells found in the connective tissue
that holds much of the body together.
They
exposed batches of growing cells to liquefied cigarette smoke and
saw the chromosomes that carry the DNA were pulled apart from both
ends.
“Double-stranded
breaks are considered the most mutagenic type of DNA damage because
the broken ends can fuse to other chromosomes in the cell,” Saunders
said in a statement.
This
happened with very small amounts of smoke, Saunders said in a statement
prepared ahead of a weekend meeting of the Environmental Mutagen
Society in Pittsburgh
Cigarette
smoking is known to cause lung cancer and is also linked to bladder,
larynx and esophageal cancers, as well as heart disease.
“Unfortunately,
no amount of scientific evidence arguing against smoking will get
everyone to stop or not begin to smoke in the first place. So, perhaps
one long-term goal should be to develop cigarettes that somehow
prevent what we’ve seen happen to the cells in our lab,” Saunders
said.
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