Berkeley Lab thirdhand smoke researchers have been awarded a new three-year grant totaling $904,744. The funding from the Tobacco-Related Disease Research Program (TRDRP) will support translational studies aimed at mitigating health impacts of exposure to thirdhand smoke (THS)—the toxic residues from tobacco smoke that linger on indoor surfaces and in dust long after a cigarette has been extinguished.
From the Biosciences Area, Biological Systems and Engineering (BSE) Division staff scientist Bo Hang will serve as principal investigator on the studies, with senior scientist Jian-Hua Mao and staff scientist Antoine Snijders, also of BSE, as co-investigators. They will take an integrative systems biology approach using the genetically diverse Collaborative Cross (CC) mouse resource, as well as human samples, to develop biomarkers of THS-induced biological effects and identify genetic factors for susceptibility.
Collaborators on the project include staff scientist Hugo Destaillats and retiree affiliate Lara Gundel in the Energy Technologies Area (ETA) at Berkeley Lab, as well as researchers at California Thirdhand Smoke Research Consortium partner institutions UC San Francisco and UC Riverside.
The TRDRP is managed by the University of California and administers the portion of state retail taxes on tobacco products that is designated for research. In 2015, it awarded Berkeley Lab thirdhand smoke researchers grants totaling $1.3 million. Results of that previous round of funding included finding an increased lung cancer risk in mice exposed to THS, as well as effects on weight and blood cell development. The researchers first provided evidence in 2013 that THS causes DNA strand beaks and oxidative damage in human genes. Such findings were used by the California State Assembly and New York State to approve legislation banning smoking in home-based daycare centers.
The goal of the new project is to amass novel evidence of how early-life exposure to THS impacts cancer development in the general population, and how individual genetics affect this process, said Hang. “This knowledge should be valuable for preventing THS-induced human health effects, as well as for framing and enforcing new policies against THS in the United States.”
In 2018, the thirdhand smoke research team—comprised of BSE’s Hang, Mao, Snijders, Altaf Sarker, and Mohamed Sleiman, and ETA’s Destaillats, Gundel, Brett Singer, and Xiaochen Tang—received a Berkeley Lab Director’s Award for Exceptional Achievement in Societal Impact. The award citation noted that their research delineating the hazards of THS exposure “is vital for protecting and improving public health nationwide.”
In addition, California Thirdhand Smoke Research Consortium partner institutions San Diego State University and the University of Southern California have launched an online resource dedicated to educating the public about the lasting impact of tobacco smoke pollutants at thirdhandsmoke.org.