4.6 Article

Effect of autophagy on ferroptosis in foam cells via Nrf2

Journal

MOLECULAR AND CELLULAR BIOCHEMISTRY
Volume 477, Issue 5, Pages 1597-1606

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11010-021-04347-3

Keywords

Nrf2; Ferroptosis; Autophagy; Atherosclerosis

Categories

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81672084]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

In the progression of atherosclerotic plaque, the death of foam cells accelerates plaque development. While Nrf2 has been considered a major regulator of antioxidants, recent studies have shown that insufficient autophagy can deactivate Nrf2-mediated defense, leading to ferroptosis.
The progression of atherosclerotic plaque is accelerated by death of foam cells during the development of the plaque. There are several forms of foam cell death, such as autophagy and ferroptosis forms of cell death together are commonly predominant. Therefore, it is particularly important to study the crosstalk between various forms of cell death in atheroscler and ferroptosis. Although there is a dominant form of cell death that plays a role in the disease, motic plaques. Nuclear factor NF-E2-related factor (Nrf2) has been considered as a major regulator of antioxidant in previous studies, but recent studies have revealed that insufficient cellular autophagy can turn off Nrf2-mediated antioxidant defense while initiating Nrf2-manipulated iron deposition and lipid peroxidation, leading to the development of iron ferroptosis. The present experiment aimed to explain the regulatory mechanism between autophagy and ferroptosis through Nrf2. In this experiment, differentiated human THP-1 macrophages were used, which were treated with ox-LDL into foam cells with the addition of the autophagy inhibitor chloroquine (CQ), the inhibitor of Nrf2 (ML385), the promoter of Nrf2 (t-BHQ), and the inhibitor of ferroptosis (Liproxstatin-1), and the expression levels of autophagy-related proteins p62 and LC3, as well as Nrf2 and ferroptosis-related proteins xCT and GPX4 by WB, foam cell survival by CCK8, and intracellular reactive oxygen levels by Flow cytometry analysis and fluorescence microscopy. The effect of autophagy through Nrf2 on ferroptosis in foam cells was determined. The results revealed that insufficient autophagy in CQ-induced foam cells could lead to foam cell death in atherosclerotic plaques, and the cause of cell death was that insufficient autophagy in foam cells turned off the positive effect of Nfr2 antioxidant, initiated the negative effect of Nrf2 to promote intracellular reactive oxygen species production, and this negative effect promoted ferroptosis in foam cells.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available