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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
- Files in This Item:
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