0
Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Sign in to save

Klotho-mediated activation of the anti-oxidant Nrf2/ARE signal pathway affects cell apoptosis, senescence and mobility in hypoxic human trophoblasts: involvement of Klotho in the pathogenesis of preeclampsia

Cell Division 2024 9 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 55 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Baomei Xu, Fang Cheng, Xiaolei Xue

Summary

Researchers found that the anti-aging protein Klotho is reduced in preeclampsia — a dangerous pregnancy condition — and that restoring Klotho levels protected placental cells from oxygen deprivation-induced damage by activating the Nrf2 antioxidant pathway, pointing to Klotho as both a diagnostic marker and potential treatment target.

The anti-aging gene Klotho is implicated in the pathogenesis of preeclampsia (PE), which is a pregnancy disease characterized by hypertension and proteinuria. Oxidative stress is closely associated with the worse outcomes in PE, and Klotho can eliminate Reactive Oxygen Species (ROS), but it is still unclear whether Klotho regulates PE pathogenesis through modulating oxidative damages. Here, by analyzing the clinical data, we found that Klotho was aberrantly downregulated in PE umbilical cord serum and placental tissues, compared to their normal counterparts. In in vitro experiments, the human trophoblasts were subjected to hypoxic pressure to establish the PE models, and we confirmed that hypoxia also decreased the expression levels of Klotho in those trophoblasts. In addition, through performing functional experiments, we confirmed that hypoxia promoted oxidative damages, cell apoptosis and senescence, whereas suppressed cell invasion in human trophoblasts, which were all reversed overexpressing Klotho. The following mechanical experiments verified that Klotho increased the levels of nuclear Nrf2, total Nrf2, SOD2 and NQO1 to activate the anti-oxidant Nrf2/ARE signal pathway, and silencing of Nrf2 abrogated the protective effects of Klotho overexpression on hypoxic human trophoblasts. Consistently, in in vivo experiments, Klotho overexpression restrained oxidative damages and facilitated cell mitosis in PE rats' placental tissues. In conclusion, this study validated that Klotho activated the Nrf2/ARE signal pathway to eliminate hypoxia-induced oxidative damages, cell apoptosis and senescence to recover normal cellular functions in human trophoblasts, and our data supported that Klotho could be used as novel biomarker for PE diagnosis and treatment.

Sign in to start a discussion.

More Papers Like This

Article Tier 2

Microplastic exposure induces preeclampsia-like symptoms via HIF-1α/TFRC-mediated ferroptosis in placental trophoblast cells

Researchers exposed pregnant rats to polystyrene microplastics and found that the particles induced symptoms resembling preeclampsia, including elevated blood pressure and increased protein in urine. The microplastics triggered a type of cell death called ferroptosis in placental cells by activating a specific signaling pathway that led to iron overload and oxidative damage. The study identifies microplastic-induced placental cell death as a potential mechanism linking environmental plastic exposure to pregnancy complications.

Article Tier 2

Evaluation of polyethylene microplastics toxicity using Nrf2/ARE and MAPK/Nrf2 signaling pathways

Researchers exposed male and female rats to varying doses of polyethylene microplastics and found dose-dependent increases in oxidative stress markers and disruptions to reproductive hormone levels. They identified specific cellular signaling pathways, including the Nrf2 antioxidant response system, that were affected by microplastic exposure. The study suggests that microplastic ingestion may trigger oxidative damage and reproductive effects through identifiable molecular mechanisms.

Article Tier 2

Role of the Nrf2 Signaling Pathway in Ovarian Aging: Potential Mechanism and Protective Strategies

This review explores how the Nrf2 signaling pathway, a key defense system against oxidative stress, plays a role in ovarian aging, which leads to menopause, reduced fertility, and health risks like osteoporosis. While not focused on microplastics specifically, the Nrf2 pathway is one of the main systems that microplastics disrupt when they accumulate in reproductive tissues. Understanding this pathway helps explain how environmental pollutants like microplastics could accelerate ovarian aging and harm fertility.

Article Tier 2

Nrf2-dependent redox regulation protects myoblasts from polystyrene nanoplastic-induced premature senescence

Researchers showed that polystyrene nanoplastics trigger premature senescence (accelerated aging) in mouse muscle precursor cells by downregulating the antioxidant regulator Nrf2, and that activating Nrf2 with sulforaphane — a compound found in broccoli — significantly protected cells by restoring mitochondrial integrity and reducing oxidative stress markers.

Article Tier 2

Gestational exposure to nanoplastics disrupts fetal development by promoting the placental aging via ferroptosis of syncytiotrophoblast

This mouse study found that exposure to nanoplastics during pregnancy caused placental aging and fetal growth restriction through a process called ferroptosis -- a type of iron-dependent cell death -- in the cells that form the barrier between mother and baby. When researchers blocked the ferroptosis process, fetal weight improved, suggesting this pathway could be a target for protecting pregnancies from nanoplastic-related harm.

Share this paper