Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Cadmium induced ferroptosis and inflammation in sheep via targeting ACSL4/NF-κB axis.
- Journal:
- Frontiers in veterinary science
- Year:
- 2025
- Authors:
- Ma, Zimeng et al.
- Affiliation:
- College of Life Sciences · China
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Cadmium, a major environmental contaminant, induces progressive intestinal damage through bioaccumulation. Elucidating its pathogenic mechanisms is crucial for developing therapeutic interventions. METHODS: This study employed multi-omics approaches to systematically investigated cadmium-induced ileal dysfunction in Hu sheep and the intervention mechanisms of sodium octanoate. RESULTS: Phenotypic assessment revealed cadmium exposure caused intestinal barrier impairment and histopathological changes. Integrated transcriptomic-proteomic analysis revealed cadmium disrupted mitochondrial dysfunction via oxidative phosphorylation pathway inhibition. Leading to reactive oxygen species (ROS) overaccumulation. This ROS surge activated ferroptosis, which exacerbated inflammatory responses through NF-κB signaling. Cross-omics correlation analysis identified ferroptosis-related proteins as key regulators of the NF-κB inflammatory axis, suggesting ferroptosis modulation as a potential therapeutic strategy. Notably, sodium octanoate exhibited potent anti-inflammatory effects through specific binding to ACSL4, a critical ferroptosis regulatory protein, this interaction ameliorated oxidative stress and inflammation cascades while demonstrating therapeutic potential for cadmium-induced inflammation. DISCUSSION: Our findings establish the ACSL4/NF-κB axis as a central mechanism in cadmium-induced pathology, highlighting sodium octanoate as a potential therapeutic intervention for pollutant-induced intestinal disorders.
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Search related cases →Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40901058/