Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety (Sep 2024)

Fluoride exposure-induced gut microbiota alteration mediates colonic ferroptosis through N6-methyladenosine (m6A) mediated silencing of SLC7A11

  • Haonan Huang,
  • Yu Lin,
  • Jinge Xin,
  • Ning Sun,
  • Zhifang Zhao,
  • Hesong Wang,
  • Lixiao Duan,
  • Yanxi Zhou,
  • Xingmei Liu,
  • Jing Fang,
  • Bo Jing,
  • Kangcheng Pan,
  • Yan Zeng,
  • Dong Zeng,
  • Hao Li,
  • Hailin Ma,
  • Yang Bai,
  • Limin Wei,
  • Xueqin Ni

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 283
p. 116816

Abstract

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Fluoride exposure is widespread worldwide and poses a significant threat to organisms, particularly to their gastrointestinal tracts. However, due to limited knowledge of the mechanism of fluoride induced intestinal injury, it has been challenging to develop an effective treatment. To address this issue, we used a series of molecular biology in vitro and in vivo experiments. NaF triggered m6A mediated ferroptosis to cause intestinal damage. Mechanistically, NaF exposure increased the m6A level of SLC7A11 mRNA, promoted YTHDF2 binding to m6A-modified SLC7A11 mRNA, drove the degradation of SLC7A11 mRNA, and led to a decrease in its protein expression, which eventually triggers ferroptosis. Moreover, NaF aggravated ferroptosis of the colon after antibiotics destroyed the composition of gut microbiota. 16 S rRNA sequencing and SPEC-OCCU plots, Zi-Pi relationships, and Spearman correlation coefficients verified that Lactobacillus murinus (ASV54, ASV58, and ASV82) plays a key role in the response to NaF-induced ferroptosis. Collectively, NaF-induced gut microbiota alteration mediates severe intestinal cell injury by inducing m6A modification-mediated ferroptosis. Our results highlight a key mechanism of the gut in response to NaF exposure and suggest a valuable theoretical basis for its prevention and treatment.

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