TGFβ2-driven ferritin degradation and subsequent ferroptosis underlie Salivary gland dysfunction in postmenopausal conditions

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Title
TGFβ2-driven ferritin degradation and subsequent ferroptosis underlie Salivary gland dysfunction in postmenopausal conditions
Author(s)
S J Oh; Y Y Shin; J S Ahn; H J Park; M J Kang; T H Shin; B C Lee; W K Kim; J M Oh; D Lee; Y H Kim; J M Kim; E S Sung; Eun-Woo Lee; J H Jeong; B J Lee; Y Seo; H S Kim
Bibliographic Citation
Advanced Science, vol. 11, no. 47, pp. 2400660-2400660
Publication Year
2024
Abstract
Despite the high incidence of dry mouth in postmenopausal women, its underlying mechanisms and therapeutic interventions remain underexplored. Using ovariectomized (OVX) mouse models, here this study identifies ferroptosis, an iron-dependent regulated cell death, as a central mechanism driving postmenopausal salivary gland (SG) dysfunction. In the OVX-SGs, TGFβ signaling pathway is enhanced with the aberrant TGFβ2 expression in SG mesenchymal cells. Intriguingly, TGFβ2 treatment reduces iron-storing ferritin levels, leading to lipid peroxidation and ferroptotic death in SG epithelial organoids (SGOs). Mechanistically, TGFβ2 promotes the autophagy-mediated ferritin degradation, so-called ferritinophagy. A notable overexpression of the type III TGFβ receptor (TβRIII) is found in the OVX-SGs and TGFβ2-treated SGOs, while the silencing of TβRIII mitigates the ferroptosis-mediated deleterious effects of TGFβ2 on SGOs. Finally, administration of ferroptosis inhibitor, Liproxstatin-1 (Lip-1), improves saliva secretion in OVX mice. Present findings collectively suggest a link between TGFβ signaling, ferroptosis, and SG injury, offering new therapeutic avenues for postmenopausal xerostomia.
ISSN
2198-3844
Publisher
Wiley
Full Text Link
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/advs.202400660
Type
Article
Appears in Collections:
Division of A.I. & Biomedical Research > Metabolic Regulation Research Center > 1. Journal Articles
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