International consensus guidelines for the definition, detection, and interpretation of autophagy-dependent ferroptosis

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

  • Xin Chen
  • Andrey S. Tsvetkov
  • Han-ming Shen
  • Ciro Isidoro
  • Nicholas T. Ktistakis
  • Andreas Linkermann
  • Werner J.h. Koopman
  • Hans-uwe Simon
  • Lorenzo Galluzzi
  • Shouqing Luo
  • Daqian Xu
  • Wei Gu
  • Olivier Peulen
  • Qian Cai
  • David C. Rubinsztein
  • Jen-tsan Chi
  • Donna D. Zhang
  • Changfeng Li
  • Shinya Toyokuni
  • Jinbao Liu
  • Jong-lyel Roh
  • Enyong Dai
  • Gabor Juhasz
  • Wei Liu
  • Jianhua Zhang
  • Minghua Yang
  • Jiao Liu
  • Ling-qiang Zhu
  • Weiping Zou
  • Mauro Piacentini
  • Wen-xing Ding
  • Zhenyu Yue
  • Yangchun Xie
  • David A. Gewirtz
  • Michael A. Mandell
  • Charleen T. Chu
  • Debasish Sinha
  • Eftekhar Eftekharpour
  • Boris Zhivotovsky
  • Sébastien Besteiro
  • Dmitry I. Gabrilovich
  • Do-hyung Kim
  • Valerian E. Kagan
  • Hülya Bayir
  • Guang-chao Chen
  • Scott Ayton
  • Jan D. Lünemann
  • Masaaki Komatsu
  • Stefan Krautwald
  • Ben Loos
  • Eric H. Baehrecke
  • Jiayi Wang
  • Jon D. Lane
  • Junichi Sadoshima
  • Wan Seok Yang
  • Minghui Gao
  • Christian Münz
  • Michael Thumm
  • Martin Kampmann
  • Di Yu
  • Marta M. Lipinski
  • Jace W. Jones
  • Xuejun Jiang
  • Herbert J. Zeh
  • Rui Kang
  • Daniel J. Klionsky
  • Guido Kroemer
  • Daolin Tang
Macroautophagy/autophagy is a complex degradation process with a dual role in cell death that is influenced by the cell types that are involved and the stressors they are exposed to. Ferroptosis is an iron-dependent oxidative form of cell death characterized by unrestricted lipid peroxidation in the context of heterogeneous and plastic mechanisms. Recent studies have shed light on the involvement of specific types of autophagy (e.g. ferritinophagy, lipophagy, and clockophagy) in initiating or executing ferroptotic cell death through the selective degradation of anti-injury proteins or organelles. Conversely, other forms of selective autophagy (e.g. reticulophagy and lysophagy) enhance the cellular defense against ferroptotic damage. Dysregulated autophagy-dependent ferroptosis has implications for a diverse range of pathological conditions. This review aims to present an updated definition of autophagy-dependent ferroptosis, discuss influential substrates and receptors, outline experimental methods, and propose guidelines for interpreting the results.
OriginalsprogEngelsk
TidsskriftAutophagy
Sider (fra-til)1-34
ISSN1554-8627
DOI
StatusE-pub ahead of print - 2024

ID: 387430673