31 research outputs found

    SnapShot: Ferroptosis.

    No full text
    Ferroptosis is a regulated form of cell death that occurs when phospholipids with polyunsaturated fatty acyl tails are oxidized in an iron-dependent manner. Research in recent years has uncovered complex cellular networks that induce and suppress lethal lipid peroxidation. This SnapShot provides an overview of ferroptosis-related pathways, including relevant biomolecules and small-molecule modulators regulating them

    A roadmap to creating ferroptosis-based medicines.

    No full text
    Ferroptosis is a regulated form of non-apoptotic cell death implicated in pathological settings. To be exploited clinically, ferroptosis requires reagents that unequivocally detect ferroptosis in human and animal tissues. Such tools may enable development of ferroptosis-based medicines for diverse diseases

    Ferroptosis: Mechanisms, biology and role in disease.

    No full text
    The research field of ferroptosis has seen exponential growth over the past few years, since the term was coined in 2012. This unique modality of cell death, driven by iron-dependent phospholipid peroxidation, is regulated by multiple cellular metabolic pathways, including redox homeostasis, iron handling, mitochondrial activity and metabolism of amino acids, lipids and sugars, in addition to various signalling pathways relevant to disease. Numerous organ injuries and degenerative pathologies are driven by ferroptosis. Intriguingly, therapy-resistant cancer cells, particularly those in the mesenchymal state and prone to metastasis, are exquisitely vulnerable to ferroptosis. As such, pharmacological modulation of ferroptosis, via both its induction and its inhibition, holds great potential for the treatment of drug-resistant cancers, ischaemic organ injuries and other degenerative diseases linked to extensive lipid peroxidation. In this Review, we provide a critical analysis of the current molecular mechanisms and regulatory networks of ferroptosis, the potential physiological functions of ferroptosis in tumour suppression and immune surveillance, and its pathological roles, together with a potential for therapeutic targeting. Importantly, as in all rapidly evolving research areas, challenges exist due to misconceptions and inappropriate experimental methods. This Review also aims to address these issues and to provide practical guidelines for enhancing reproducibility and reliability in studies of ferroptosis. Finally, we discuss important concepts and pressing questions that should be the focus of future ferroptosis research

    Machine learning classifies ferroptosis and apoptosis cell death modalities with TfR1 immunostaining.

    No full text
    Determining cell death mechanisms occurring in patient and animal tissues is a longstanding goal that requires suitable biomarkers and accurate quantification. However, effective methods remain elusive. To develop more powerful and unbiased analytic frameworks, we developed a machine learning approach for automated cell death classification. Image sets were collected of HT-1080 fibrosarcoma cells undergoing ferroptosis or apoptosis and stained with an anti-transferrin receptor 1 (TfR1) antibody, together with nuclear and F-actin staining. Features were extracted using high-content-analysis software, and a classifier was constructed by fitting a multinomial logistic lasso regression model to the data. The prediction accuracy of the classifier within three classes (control, ferroptosis, apoptosis) was 93%. Thus, TfR1 staining, combined with nuclear and F-actin staining, can reliably detect both apoptotic and ferroptotis cells when cell features are analyzed in an unbiased manner using machine learning, providing a method for unbiased analysis of modes of cell death

    Selective inhibitors of death in mutant huntingtin cells

    No full text
    Huntington disease (HD) is an inherited neurodegenerative disorder with unclear pathophysiology. We developed a high-throughput assay in a neuronal cell culture model of HD, screened 43,685 compounds and identified 29 novel selective inhibitors of cell death in mutant huntingtin-expressing cells. Four compounds were active in diverse HD models, which suggests a role for cell death in HD; these compounds are mechanistic probes and potential drug leads for H

    Characterization of a patient-derived variant of GPX4 for precision therapy.

    No full text
    Glutathione peroxidase 4 (GPX4), as the only enzyme in mammals capable of reducing esterified phospholipid hydroperoxides within a cellular context, protects cells from ferroptosis. We identified a homozygous point mutation in the GPX4 gene, resulting in an R152H coding mutation, in three patients with Sedaghatian-type spondylometaphyseal dysplasia. Using structure-based analyses and cell models, including patient fibroblasts, of this variant, we found that the missense variant destabilized a critical loop, which disrupted the active site and caused a substantial loss of enzymatic function. We also found that the R152H variant of GPX4 is less susceptible to degradation, revealing the degradation mechanism of the GPX4 protein. Proof-of-concept therapeutic treatments, which overcome the impaired R152H GPX4 activity, including selenium supplementation, selective antioxidants and a deuterated polyunsaturated fatty acid were identified. In addition to revealing a general approach to investigating rare genetic diseases, we demonstrate the biochemical foundations of therapeutic strategies targeting GPX4

    Transferrin receptor is a specific ferroptosis marker.

    No full text
    Ferroptosis is a type of regulated cell death driven by the iron-dependent accumulation of oxidized polyunsaturated fatty acid-containing phospholipids. There is no reliable way to selectively stain ferroptotic cells in tissue sections to characterize the extent of ferroptosis in animal models or patient samples. We address this gap by immunizing mice with membranes from lymphoma cells treated with the ferroptosis inducer piperazine erastin and screening similar to 4,750 of the resulting monoclonal antibodies generated for their ability to selectively detect cells undergoing ferroptosis. We find that one antibody, 3F3 ferroptotic membrane antibody (3F3-FMA), is effective as a selective ferroptosis-staining reagent. The antigen of 3F3-FMA is identified as the human transferrin receptor 1 protein (TfR1). We validate this finding with several additional anti-TfR1 antibodies and compare them to other potential ferroptosis-detecting reagents. We find that anti-TfR1 and anti-malondialdehyde adduct antibodies are effective at staining ferroptotic tumor cells in multiple cell culture and tissue contexts
    corecore