Neuroprotection of NRF2 against Ferroptosis after Traumatic Brain Injury in Mice

Author:

Cheng Hao12,Wang Pengfei13,Wang Ning13,Dong Wenwen13,Chen Ziyuan13,Wu Mingzhe13,Wang Ziwei13,Yu Ziqi13,Guan Dawei143,Wang Linlin143,Zhao Rui143

Affiliation:

1. Department of Forensic Pathology, China Medical University School of Forensic Medicine, Shenyang 110122, China

2. School of Forensic Medicine, Kunming Medical University, Kunming 650500, China

3. Collaborative Laboratory of Intelligentized Forensic Science, Shenyang 110034, China

4. Liaoning Province Key Laboratory of Forensic Bio-Evidence Sciences, Shenyang 110122, China

Abstract

Ferroptosis and iron-related redox imbalance aggravate traumatic brain injury (TBI) outcomes. NRF2 is the predominant transcription factor regulating oxidative stress and neuroinflammation in TBI, but its role in iron-induced post-TBI damage is unclear. We investigated ferroptotic neuronal damage in the injured cortex and observed neurological deficits post-TBI. These were ameliorated by the iron chelator deferoxamine (DFO) in wild-type mice. In Nrf2-knockout (Nrf2−/−) mice, more sever ferroptosis and neurological deficits were detected. Dimethyl fumarate (DMF)-mediated NRF2 activation alleviated neural dysfunction in TBI mice, partly due to TBI-induced ferroptosis mitigation. Additionally, FTH-FTL and FSP1 protein levels, associated with iron metabolism and the ferroptotic redox balance, were highly NRF2-dependent post-TBI. Thus, NRF2 is neuroprotective against TBI-induced ferroptosis through both the xCT-GPX4- and FTH-FTL-determined free iron level and the FSP1-regulated redox status. This yields insights into the neuroprotective role of NRF2 in TBI-induced neuronal damage and its potential use in TBI treatment.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Shenyang Science and Technology Innovation Support Plan for Young and Middle-aged Talent

Natural Science Foundation of Liaoning Province

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Cell Biology,Clinical Biochemistry,Molecular Biology,Biochemistry,Physiology

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