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Ferroptosis and recurrent miscarriage: a critical review of pathophysiology and emerging therapeutic targets

Mohammad Masoud Khodaei, Zahra Noori, Fateme Zare, Ahmad Meshkin

2025Frontiers in Cell and Developmental Biology9 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Ferroptosis is characterized as a specialized type of regulated cellular death that relies on iron and lipid peroxidation, which has recently been highlighted as playing a crucial role in the etiology of recurrent miscarriage (RM). Ferroptosis in RM is driven by dysregulated iron metabolism and increased oxidative stress, resulting from impaired antioxidant defense, which leads to lipid peroxidation and consequent cell death in trophoblasts. The cellular changes compromise placental development and impair trophoblast invasion and maternal-fetal tolerance. Therapeutic interventions targeting ferroptosis are promising for the mitigation of its effects and improvement of pregnancy outcomes. Strategies include Glutathione Peroxidase 4 (GPX4) activity enhancement, glutathione replenishment, ferroptosis inhibitors, and iron metabolism modulation. Further, new strategies targeting non-coding RNAs, and epigenetic regulators emphasize ferroptosis as a viable therapeutic target. This review emphasizes the importance of ferroptosis in the pathophysiology of RM and highlights its potential for guiding innovative treatments.

Topics & Concepts

GPX4Lipid peroxidationEpigeneticsMiscarriageOxidative stressTrophoblastBiologyPathophysiologyCancer researchBioinformaticsCell biologyMedicinePlacentaFetusPregnancyEndocrinologyGlutathione peroxidaseBiochemistryGeneticsSuperoxide dismutaseGenePregnancy and preeclampsia studiesReproductive System and PregnancyCancer-related molecular mechanisms research
Ferroptosis and recurrent miscarriage: a critical review of pathophysiology and emerging therapeutic targets | Litcius