Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety (Oct 2024)

ATF3 as a response factor to regulate Cd-induced reproductive damage by activating the NRF2/HO-1 ferroptosis pathway

  • Sisi Li,
  • Sheng Ma,
  • Lirui Wang,
  • Dian Zhan,
  • Shengyao Jiang,
  • Zhenyang Zhang,
  • Manyi Xiong,
  • Yanping Jiang,
  • Qixian Huang,
  • Jian Zhang,
  • Xinhong Li

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 285
p. 117114

Abstract

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Cadmium (Cd) has garnered significant attention due to reproductive toxicity in inducing ferroptosis. However, the specific mechanisms underlying Cd-induced germ cell ferroptosis remain poorly understood. This study aimed to systematically explore the molecular mechanisms of germ cell ferroptosis by investigating differential changes in transcription factors and proteins in male mice treated orally with CdCl2 (0.5 g/L) reaching postnatal day 60, alongside Leydig cell (TM3) and Sertoli cell (TM4) lines. Results demonstrated that Cd exposure led to increased iron overload and oxidative stress in mouse testes, disrupted intracellular mitochondrial morphology characteristic of ferroptosis. RNA sequencing revealed significant upregulation of Atf3 and Hmox1 in Cd-exposed germ cells, along with increased expression of ATF3 and HO-1. Intervention in ferroptosis or HO-1 effectively rescued cells from Cd-induced mortality by breaking the detrimental cycle between lipid peroxidation and HO-1 activation. Further findings showed that NRF2 and HO-1 expression was notably elevated upon ATF3 overexpression in TM3 and TM4 cells, activating the Keap1-Nrf2 pathway and triggering ferroptosis in testes, whereas NRF2 and HO-1 expression levels were reversed when ATF3 was silenced. This study provides novel insights into ATF3-mediated NRF2/HO-1 signaling in Cd-induced mitochondrial ferroptosis in testes, shedding light on the mechanisms underlying Cd-induced ferroptosis and testicular injury.

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