Abnormal Iron and Lipid Metabolism Mediated Ferroptosis in Kidney Diseases and Its Therapeutic Potential
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. The General Mechanisms of the Regulation of Ferroptosis
2.1. The Regulation of Ferroptosis by the GSH/GPX4 Pathway
2.2. The Regulation of Ferroptosis by Iron Metabolic Pathways
2.3. The Regulation of Ferroptosis by the Lipid Metabolic Pathways
2.4. The Regulation of Ferroptosis by the Mitochondrial Metabolic Pathways
2.5. The Regulation of Ferroptosis by Other Signaling Pathways
3. Ferroptosis and Kidney Diseases
3.1. The Role of Ferroptosis in AKI
3.2. The Roles of Ferroptosis in CKD
3.3. The Roles of Ferroptosis in ADPKD
3.4. The Roles of Ferroptosis in Renal Cell Carcinoma (RCC)
4. Targeting Ferroptosis for Kidney Disease Therapy
5. Conclusions and Perspectives
Drugs | Effects | Experimental Model | Route and Dosage of Drug Administration | Local/ Systemic | Mechanisms of Different Drugs | References |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ferrostain-1 | Prevented ROS formation | Animal model: Folic Acid-induced nephropathy; Cisplatin-induced nephropathy; UUO; Diabetic db/db mice; Pkd1RC/RC and Pkd1flox/flox: Pkhd1-Cre mice | IP: Pkd1RC/RC and Pkd1flox/flox: Pkhd1-Cre mice: 4 mg/kg/da; Cisplatin-induced nephropathy; 5 mg/kg/day Diabetic db/db mice; 1 mg/kg/day; UUO: 5 mg/kg | systemic | Inhibition of the upregulation of IL-33; Inhibition HIF-1α/HO-1 pathway; Normalize the iron metabolism and inhibiting cell proliferation through Akt, S6, Stat3 and Rb signal pathways | [15,43,75,116] |
SRS 16-86 | Ferroptosis inhibition | Animal model: IRI model | IP: 2 mg/kg | systemic | Inhibition of mitochondrial permeability transition, postischemic and toxic renal necrosis. | [114] |
DFX/DFO | Chelate iron | Animal model: UUO; 5/6 nephrectomy | DFO: IP: 100 mg/kg/day DFX: Oral: low dose 15 mg/kg/day, moderate dose 30 mg/kg/day high dose 60 mg/kg/day | systemic | TGF-β1/Smad3, inflammation, and oxidative stress pathways | [85,92] |
Liproxstain-1 | Ferroptosis inhibition | Animal model: IRI model | IP: 10 mg/kg | systemic | Induces GPX4 expression, reduces COX2 expression and inhibition of the kidney inflammation activation | [115] |
N-acetyl-l- cysteine | Reduce ROS | Animal model: Cisplatin-induced nephropathy | IP: 50 mg/kg | systemic | Inhibition of the kidney inflammation activation and the complement system | [124] |
Rosiglitazone | Decrease ROS | Animal model: STZ-induced diabetic kidneys | Intragastric: 5 or 20 mg/kg/day Oral: 3 mg/kg/day | systemic | Inhibition of NF-ĸB activation and MCP-1 expression. | [125,126] |
CPX-O | Chelate iron | Animal model: Pkd1RC/RC/Pkd2+/− mice | IP: 10 mg/kg/day | systemic | Induces ferritin degradation via ferritinophagy | [118] |
L-buthionine (S,R)-sulfoximine | Deprivation of glutamine and cystine | Animal model: MYC-dependent RCC mouse model | Oral: 20 mM in drinking water/day | systemic | GSH synthesis inhibition | [106] |
Artesunate | Induction of ferroptosis | Cell model: Sunitinib-resistant RCC cells | 20 uM in cultured media | local | Cell cycle arrest and modulation of cell cycle regulating proteins | [122] |
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Ferroptosis | Apoptosis | Autophagy | Necroptosis | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Morphological Features | Cell membrane: lack of rupture and blebbing of the plasma membrane, rounding-up of the cell Cytoplasm: small mitochondria with increased mitochondrial membrane densities, reduction or vanishing of mitochondria crista, outer mitochondrial membrane rupture Nucleus: normal nucleus | Cell membrane: formation of apoptotic bodies and cytoskeletal disintegration Cytoplasm: cellular volume reduction but no significant changes in mitochondrial structure Nucleus: nuclear volume reduction; chromatin agglutination; nuclear fragmentation | Cell membrane: normal cell membrane Cytoplasm: formation of double-membraned autolysosomes, including macroautophagy, microautophagy and chaperone-mediated autophagy Nucleus: lack of chromatin condensation, | Cell membrane: plasma membrane breakdown Cytoplasm: generalized swelling of the cytoplasm and organelles Nucleus: moderate chromatin condensation |
Biochemical Features | Iron accumulation and lipid peroxidation; Inhibition of system Xc- with decreased cystine uptake; Release of arachidonic acid mediators | Activation of caspases oligonucleosomal DNA fragmentation | Increased lysosomal activity (e.g., LC3-I to LC3-II conversion) | Drop in ATP levels; Activation of RIP1, RIP3, and MLKL; Release of DAMPs; PARP1 hyperactivation |
Core proteins | SLC7A11, Nrf2, HO-1, GPX4, p53, TFR1, VDAC2/3, ACSL4, LOXs | p53, Bax, Bak, Bcl-2 family proteins | ATG5, ATG7, Beclin 1 and other ATG family proteins | RIP1, RIP3, MLKL |
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Zhang, X.; Li, X. Abnormal Iron and Lipid Metabolism Mediated Ferroptosis in Kidney Diseases and Its Therapeutic Potential. Metabolites 2022, 12, 58. https://doi.org/10.3390/metabo12010058
Zhang X, Li X. Abnormal Iron and Lipid Metabolism Mediated Ferroptosis in Kidney Diseases and Its Therapeutic Potential. Metabolites. 2022; 12(1):58. https://doi.org/10.3390/metabo12010058
Chicago/Turabian StyleZhang, Xiaoqin, and Xiaogang Li. 2022. "Abnormal Iron and Lipid Metabolism Mediated Ferroptosis in Kidney Diseases and Its Therapeutic Potential" Metabolites 12, no. 1: 58. https://doi.org/10.3390/metabo12010058
APA StyleZhang, X., & Li, X. (2022). Abnormal Iron and Lipid Metabolism Mediated Ferroptosis in Kidney Diseases and Its Therapeutic Potential. Metabolites, 12(1), 58. https://doi.org/10.3390/metabo12010058