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Public Health and Population Science Faculty Publications and Presentations

Air pollution

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Simulated Wildfire Smoke Significantly Alters Sperm Dna Methylation Patterns In A Murine Model, Adam Schuller, Chiara Bellini, Timothy G. Jenkins, Matthew Eden, Jacqueline Matz, Jessica Oakes, Luke Montrose Sep 2021

Simulated Wildfire Smoke Significantly Alters Sperm Dna Methylation Patterns In A Murine Model, Adam Schuller, Chiara Bellini, Timothy G. Jenkins, Matthew Eden, Jacqueline Matz, Jessica Oakes, Luke Montrose

Public Health and Population Science Faculty Publications and Presentations

Wildfires are now a common feature of the western US, increasing in both intensity and number of acres burned over the last three decades. The effects of this changing wildfire and smoke landscape are a critical public and occupational health issue. While respiratory morbidity due to smoke exposure is a priority, evaluating the molecular underpinnings that explain recent extrapulmonary observations is necessary. Here, we use an Apoe−/− mouse model to investigate the epigenetic impact of paternal exposure to simulated wildfire smoke. We demonstrate that 40 days of exposure to smoke from Douglas fir needles induces sperm DNA methylation changes …


What’S In Wildfire Smoke, And Why Is It So Bad For Your Lungs?, Luke Montrose Aug 2020

What’S In Wildfire Smoke, And Why Is It So Bad For Your Lungs?, Luke Montrose

Public Health and Population Science Faculty Publications and Presentations

If I dare to give the coronavirus credit for anything, I would say it has made people more conscious of the air they breathe.

A friend texted me recently after going for a jog in the foothills near Boise, Idaho, writing: “My lungs are burning … explain what’s happening!!!”

A wildfire was burning to the east of town – one of hundreds of fires that were sending smoke and ash through communities in hot, dry western states. As an environmental toxicologist, I research how air pollution, particularly wood smoke, impacts human health and disease.