128 research outputs found

    Ferroptosis spreads to neighboring cells via plasma membrane contacts

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    Ferroptosis is a lytic, iron-dependent form of regulated cell death characterized by excessive lipid peroxidation and associated with necrosis spread in diseased tissues through unknown mechanisms. Using a novel optogenetic system for light-driven ferroptosis induction via degradation of the anti-ferroptotic protein GPX4, we show that lipid peroxidation and ferroptotic death can spread to neighboring cells through their closely adjacent plasma membranes. Ferroptosis propagation is dependent on cell distance and completely abolished by disruption of α-catenin-dependent intercellular contacts or by chelation of extracellular iron. Remarkably, bridging cells with a lipid bilayer or increasing contacts between neighboring cells enhances ferroptosis spread. Reconstitution of iron-dependent spread of lipid peroxidation between pure lipid, contacting liposomes provides evidence for the physicochemical mechanism involved. Our findings support a model in which iron-dependent lipid peroxidation propagates across proximal plasma membranes of neighboring cells, thereby promoting the transmission of ferroptotic cell death with consequences for pathological tissue necrosis spread

    Ferroptosis in health and disease.

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    Ferroptosis is a pervasive non-apoptotic form of cell death highly relevant in various degenerative diseases and malignancies. The hallmark of ferroptosis is uncontrolled and overwhelming peroxidation of polyunsaturated fatty acids contained in membrane phospholipids, which eventually leads to rupture of the plasma membrane. Ferroptosis is unique in that it is essentially a spontaneous, uncatalyzed chemical process based on perturbed iron and redox homeostasis contributing to the cell death process, but that it is nonetheless modulated by many metabolic nodes that impinge on the cells' susceptibility to ferroptosis. Among the various nodes affecting ferroptosis sensitivity, several have emerged as promising candidates for pharmacological intervention, rendering ferroptosis-related proteins attractive targets for the treatment of numerous currently incurable diseases. Herein, the current members of a Germany-wide research consortium focusing on ferroptosis research, as well as key external experts in ferroptosis who have made seminal contributions to this rapidly growing and exciting field of research, have gathered to provide a comprehensive, state-of-the-art review on ferroptosis. Specific topics include: basic mechanisms, in vivo relevance, specialized methodologies, chemical and pharmacological tools, and the potential contribution of ferroptosis to disease etiopathology and progression. We hope that this article will not only provide established scientists and newcomers to the field with an overview of the multiple facets of ferroptosis, but also encourage additional efforts to characterize further molecular pathways modulating ferroptosis, with the ultimate goal to develop novel pharmacotherapies to tackle the various diseases associated with - or caused by - ferroptosis

    A fate worse than death: apoptosis as an oncogenic process

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