| Literature DB >> 33895289 |
Shuo Ni1, Yin Yuan2, Zhi Qian1, Zeyuan Zhong1, Tao Lv1, Yanbin Kuang3, Baoqing Yu4.
Abstract
Ferroptosis is a new form of regulated cell death. Several studies have demonstrated that ferroptosis was involved in multiple diseases. However, the precise role of ferroptosis in osteoporosis remains unclear. Here, we demonstrated that ferroptosis was involved in osteoclasts over the course of RANKL-induced differentiation, and it was induced by iron-starvation response and ferrintinophagy. Mechanistically, under normoxia but not hypoxia, ferroptosis could be induced due to iron-starvation response (increased transferrin receptor 1, decreased ferritin) followed by RANKL stimulation, and this was attributed to the down-regulation of aconitase activity. We further investigated intracellular iron homeostasis and found that ferritinophagy, a process initiated by FTH-NCOA4 complex autophagosome degradation, was activated followed by RANKL stimulation under normoxia. Interestingly, these processes could not be observed under hypoxia. Moreover, we demonstrated that HIF-1α contributed to the decrease of ferritinophagy and autophagy flux under hypoxia. Additionally, HIF-1α impair autophagy flux via inhibition of autophagosome formation under hypoxia in BMDMs. In vivo study, we indicated that HIF-1α specific inhibitor 2ME2 prevent OVX bone loss. In conclusion, our study comprehensively investigated the role of ferroptosis in osteoclasts in vitro and in vivo, and innovatively suggested that targeting HIF-1α and ferritin thus inducing ferroptosis in osteoclasts could be an alternative in treatment of osteoporosis.Entities:
Keywords: Ferritinophagy; Ferroptosis; HIF-1α; Hypoxia; Iron; Osteoclast
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33895289 DOI: 10.1016/j.freeradbiomed.2021.04.027
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Free Radic Biol Med ISSN: 0891-5849 Impact factor: 7.376