Author:
Gao Guanzhen,Zhou Jingru,Wang Huiqin,Ke Lijing,Zhou Jianwu,Ding Yanan,Ding Wei,Zhang Suyun,Rao Pingfan
Abstract
ABSTRACTFish oil is increasingly utilized in the form of nano-emulsion as nutrient and function fortifier. The nano-emulsion’s high polyunsaturated fatty acids content and electron donors at oil/water interface could be a potential site of redox reaction, if a previously unrecognised trigger was provided. Here we report that a vigorous superoxide production occurred in fish oil nano-emulsion in the presence of mammalian catalase in both acellular and cellular systems. Furthermore, the resulting superoxide increased cytosolic ROS and membrane lipid peroxidation of murine macrophage, and eventually caused fatal oxidative damage, which involves autophagy and ferroptosis but not apoptosis. The cell death was significantly inhibited by a catalase-specific inhibitor. The ferroptosis was independent of protease Caspase-3 activation or glutathione peroxidase suppression. Our findings discover a hidden risk factor of the widely acclaimed fish oil emulsion and suggest a novel mechanism of cellular damage by dietary lipids on mucosal layer of the alimentary tract.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory