Up in Smoke: Secondhand Cigarette Smoke Causes Weight Gain
Effects are particularly dangerous for innocent bystanders
New research is challenging the decades-old belief that smoking cigarettes helps keep you slim.A BYU study published in the American Journal of Physiology: Endocrinology and Metabolism
BYU professors Benjamin Bikman and Paul Reynolds.
The key to reversing the effects of cigarette smoke, they discovered, is to inhibit ceramide. The researchers found the mice treated with myriocin (a known ceramide blocker) didn’t gain weight or experience metabolic problems, regardless of their exposure to the smoke. However, when the smoke-exposed mice were also fed a high-sugar diet, the metabolic disruption could not be fixed. Now Bikman and his team are in a race with other researchers to find a ceramide inhibitor that is safe for humans.“The idea that there might be some therapy we could give to innocent bystanders to help protect them from the consequences of being raised in a home with a smoker is quite gratifying,” he said.And what about the smokers themselves? Bikman said that one is easier said than done.“They just have to quit,” he said. “Perhaps our research can provide added motivation as they learn about the additional harmful effects to loved ones.”Trevor Tippetts, now a graduate student working in Bikman’s lab, and Mikayla Thatcher contributed to the paper as coauthors. Tippetts, who is planning on attending medical school next year, worked on the research while still an undergraduate student at BYU.
--Originally published in BYU News