Histopathology, Urine Mutacenicity, and Bone Marrow Cytocenetics of Mice Exposed Nose-Only to Smoke from Cigarettes that Burn or Heat Tobacco

Abstract
Male and female B6C3F1 mice were exposed nose-only to smoke from a test cigarette that heats tobacco, or from a reference cigarette that burns tobacco. Cigarette smoke was generated by a smoking machine, and the concentrations of wet total particulate matter (WTPM) were adjusted to 0, 0.16, 0.32, or 0.64 mg/l. Exposures were performed 1 h/day for 14 consecutive days. Urine mutagenicity was assessed by a modified Ames bacterial assay Clastogenesis (sister-chromatid exchanges, chromosome aberrations, and micronuclei) was evaluated in bone marrow cells. Respiratory rate was depressed significantly by exposure to smoke from the reference cigarette, but not the test. Blood carboxyhemoglobin, plasma nicotine, and plasma cotinine showed exposure-dependent increases in the smoke-exposed animals. Histopathological changes similar to those noted previously in smoke-exposed rats were noted, with fewer and less pronounced changes in the animals exposed to smoke from the test cigarette when compared with the reference. Positive urine mutagenicity and clastogenic responses were observed in the animals treated with positive control chemicals. However the urine mutagenicity and clastogenic responses of smoke-exposed animals (both cigarette types) were not different from those of sham-exposed animals, except for the micronucleus assay where animals exposed to high concentrations of reference cigarette smoke showed a significant increase over controls.