High-Altitude Hypoxia Exposure Induces Iron Overload and Ferroptosis in Adipose Tissue.
Yanfei ZhangJinyu FangYingyue DongHuiru DingQuancheng ChengHuaicun LiuGuoheng XuWei-Guang ZhangPublished in: Antioxidants (Basel, Switzerland) (2022)
High altitude (HA) has become one of the most challenging environments featuring hypobaric hypoxia, which seriously threatens public health, hence its gradual attraction of public attention over the past decade. The purpose of this study is to investigate the effect of HA hypoxia on iron levels, redox state, inflammation, and ferroptosis in adipose tissue. Here, 40 mice were randomly divided into two groups: the sea-level group and HA hypoxia group (altitude of 5000 m, treatment for 4 weeks). Total iron contents, ferrous iron contents, ROS generation, lipid peroxidation, the oxidative enzyme system, proinflammatory factor secretion, and ferroptosis-related biomarkers were examined, respectively. According to the results, HA exposure increases total iron and ferrous iron levels in both WAT and BAT. Meanwhile, ROS release, MDA, 4-HNE elevation, GSH depletion, as well as the decrease in SOD, CAT, and GSH-Px activities further evidenced a phenotype of redox imbalance in adipose tissue during HA exposure. Additionally, the secretion of inflammatory factors was also significantly enhanced in HA mice. Moreover, the remarkably changed expression of ferroptosis-related markers suggested that HA exposure increased ferroptosis sensitivity in adipose tissue. Overall, this study reveals that HA exposure is capable of inducing adipose tissue redox imbalance, inflammatory response, and ferroptosis, driven in part by changes in iron overload, which is expected to provide novel preventive targets for HA-related illness.
Keyphrases
- adipose tissue
- cell death
- iron deficiency
- insulin resistance
- public health
- inflammatory response
- high fat diet
- endothelial cells
- oxidative stress
- poor prognosis
- dna damage
- cell cycle arrest
- high fat diet induced
- metabolic syndrome
- emergency department
- reactive oxygen species
- fluorescent probe
- signaling pathway
- toll like receptor
- gestational age
- long non coding rna
- electronic health record
- lipopolysaccharide induced
- hyaluronic acid
- adverse drug