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Ferroptosis inhibition via the ROS-GPX4 axis drives microplastic-induced malignant progression of nasopharyngeal carcinoma

Journal of Translational Medicine 2025 Score: 48 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Xiangying Deng Xiangying Deng, Xiangying Deng Xinglong Liu, Xinglong Liu, Xinglong Liu, Xinglong Liu, Xinglong Liu, Xinglong Liu, Xinglong Liu, Xinglong Liu, Xinglong Liu, Xinglong Liu, Xinglong Liu, Xinglong Liu, Xinglong Liu, Xinglong Liu, Xinglong Liu, Xinglong Liu, Xinglong Liu, Xinglong Liu, Juan Feng, Juan Feng, Juan Feng, Juan Feng, Juan Feng, Juan Feng, Juan Feng, Juan Feng, Juan Feng, Juan Feng, Lin Zhao, Lin Zhao, Juan Feng, Lin Zhao, Lin Zhao, Lin Zhao, Lin Zhao, Lin Zhao, Lin Zhao, Lin Zhao, Lin Zhao, Lin Zhao, Xiangying Deng

Summary

Researchers investigated how polystyrene microplastics promote malignant progression in nasopharyngeal carcinoma cells, finding that the plastics inhibit ferroptosis—an iron-dependent cell death pathway—via the ROS-GPX4 axis, thus allowing cancer cells to survive and proliferate. Blocking this anti-ferroptosis effect restored cancer cell death, suggesting that targeting the ferroptosis pathway could counteract microplastic-driven tumor progression.

Polymers
Study Type In vivo

BACKGROUND: Microplastics (MPs), as emerging environmental pollutants, have been closely linked to cancer development and progression. However, their specific role in nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC) remains unclear. This study aimed to investigate the potential mechanisms by which polystyrene microplastics (PS-MPs) promote NPC malignancy. METHODS: Cellular uptake of PS-MPs was examined by confocal microscopy in NPC cells and NP69. Proliferation, migration, and invasion were evaluated by CCK-8, EdU, colony formation, wound healing, and Transwell assays. In vivo effects were tested in xenograft and lung-metastasis models with PS-MPs exposure via drinking water. Mechanistic investigations included RNA-seq, qRT-PCR, Western blot, ROS detection, immunofluorescence, and pharmacologic interventions with MitoTEMPO and ferroptosis inducers. RESULTS: PS-MPs were readily internalized by NPC cells, with smaller particles showing higher uptake and NPC cells exhibiting greater uptake than NP69. Functionally, PS-MPs promoted proliferation, migration, invasion, and tumor progression. Mechanistically, they induced modest ROS accumulation, NRF2 nuclear translocation, and upregulation of SLC7A11 and GPX4, thereby suppressing ferroptosis. MitoTEMPO, but not DPI, reduced ROS and attenuated NRF2-SLC7A11/GPX4 signaling, indicating a mitochondrial origin of ROS. Importantly, ferroptosis restoration by Erastin or RSL3 reversed PS-MPs-induced malignant phenotypes and downregulated GPX4 and SLC7A11 expression. CONCLUSIONS: PS-MPs promote NPC progression by generating mitochondrial ROS that activate the NRF2-SLC7A11/GPX4 antioxidant axis and suppress ferroptosis. Pharmacologic reactivation of ferroptosis counteracts these effects, highlighting ferroptosis-targeted therapy as a potential strategy for mitigating microplastic-associated cancer risk.

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