A temporal study on NF-κB-mediated autonomous inflammatory response in iPSC-CMs induced by microwave radiation
Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety, 2025
Zhang C., Deng W., Wang Y., Yao B., Dong J., Liu Z., Wang H., Xu X., Peng R., Zhang J.
Disease area | Application area | Sample type | Products |
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Environmental Health & Toxicology | Pathophysiology | Cell Culture Supernatant | Olink Target 96 |
Abstract
The study aims to explore the new mechanism of human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived myocardial cells (iPSC-CMs) damage caused by microwave exposure, focusing on the changes in inflammatory factors, and to clarify the association between the dynamic sensing network and electrophysiological disorders. In this study, iPSC-CMs were exposed to 60 W/kg S-band microwaves for 30 min. The damage effects and mechanisms were investigated 1 h, 3 h, and 6 h after radiation. Using techniques such as flow cytometry, transmission electron microscopy, calcium transient, Olink proteomics, and immunofluorescence, the activity, ultrastructure, calcium signal changes, and expression of inflammatory factors of iPSC-CMs after microwave radiation were detected. Results: After microwave radiation, the activity of iPSC-CMs significantly decreased, the mitochondrial cristae were broken, the Ca2 + activation time and activation speed were abnormal, the amplitude of calcium transient changed significantly, and the action potential repolarization was abnormal. The dynamic changes of inflammatory factors were as follows: 1 h after microwave radiation, IL-6 drove acute inflammatory response, 3 h when the NF-κB pathway integrated inflammatory signals through IL-8, and 6 h after, CXCL11 dominated the repair program, and VEGFA expression rebounded to synergistically promote generation. Microwave radiation activated the classical NF-κB pathway and regulated the inflammatory balance. This study found that microwave radiation caused structural and functional damage to iPSC-CMs, and the temporal inflammatory regulation is a new mechanism of injury.