Issue 21, 2025

Mechanisms of nanoparticle-induced autophagy disruption and its crosstalk with ferroptosis

Abstract

With the rapid development of nanotechnology, nanoparticles that are typically defined as particulate materials with at least one dimension between 1 and 100 nm have found widespread applications in various fields, particularly in biomedicine. Nanoparticles can induce significant physiological disturbances, including dysregulation of autophagy and ferroptosis. As a vital cellular quality control mechanism, autophagy plays a dual role in cell survival and death while maintaining physiological homeostasis. Growing evidence indicates that autophagy-mediated ferroptosis contributes to various human diseases, making it crucial to understand how nanoparticles affect these interconnected processes for safe biomedical applications. Nanoparticles perturb autophagy through multiple mechanisms: (1) cellular adhesion and internalization of nanoparticles can interfere with autophagy-related proteins; (2) nanoparticle-induced organelle damage and DNA damage activate autophagy pathways; and (3) cellular uptake of nanoparticles may cause lysosomal dysfunction, leading to impaired autophagosome degradation. These interconnected mechanisms collectively contribute to autophagy dysregulation. This review summarizes current knowledge on nanoparticle-induced autophagy and its role in triggering ferroptosis, with a particular focus on biomedical applications. A comprehensive understanding of how nanoparticles modulate autophagy and how autophagy subsequently induces ferroptosis will significantly advance the development of nanoparticle-based biomedical technologies.

Graphical abstract: Mechanisms of nanoparticle-induced autophagy disruption and its crosstalk with ferroptosis

Article information

Article type
Review Article
Submitted
28 May 2025
Accepted
03 Sep 2025
First published
03 Sep 2025

Biomater. Sci., 2025,13, 5904-5921

Mechanisms of nanoparticle-induced autophagy disruption and its crosstalk with ferroptosis

X. Zhou, N. Zang, C. Jiang and J. Jia, Biomater. Sci., 2025, 13, 5904 DOI: 10.1039/D5BM00821B

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