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ROS-Dependent Lipid Peroxidation and Reliant Antioxidant Ferroptosis-Suppressor-Protein 1 in Rheumatoid Arthritis: a Covert Clue for Potential Therapy

Journal

INFLAMMATION
Volume 44, Issue 1, Pages 35-47

Publisher

SPRINGER/PLENUM PUBLISHERS
DOI: 10.1007/s10753-020-01338-2

Keywords

rheumatoid arthritis; ROS; cell death; ferroptosis; FSP1; TNF-alpha

Funding

  1. Natural Science Foundation of Shandong Province [BS2015SW028, ZR2016HM53, ZR2019MH05]
  2. Key Research and Development Projects of Shandong Province [2015GSF118115]
  3. Cross-disciplinary Fund of Shandong University [2018JC007]
  4. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81572191, 81501880, 81602761]
  5. College Student Science and Technology Innovation Fund of Shandong University [2019369]

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Rheumatoid arthritis is a common autoimmune disease with unknown underlying mechanisms, where oxidative stress and ferroptosis may play key roles in its development. Ferroptosis-suppressor-protein 1 is identified as a potential therapeutic target for RA due to its interaction with TNF-alpha/ROS-positive feedback loop.
Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is a common systemic autoimmune disease with a prevalence of about 1% in which genetic and environmental risk factors both participate in performance of disease. Though several studies contributed in identifying its etiology and pathogenesis, the underlying mechanisms are still unknown. To date, so as palliative for RA, cure strategies are still popular. Hypoxia and oxidative stress are implicated to RA development and subsequent ROS-mediated cell death which is a critical feature for RA progression. As for cell death and lipid peroxidation, ferroptosis is a newly discovered, iron-dependent, and non-apoptotic cell death which draws various attention due to its potential strategies for cancer therapy. Meanwhile, ferroptosis-suppressor-protein 1 (FSP1) is recently identified as a seminal breakthrough owing to its property ofversusferroptosis. By virtue of the complicated research progress on FSP1 with ferroptosis, in this review, we summarize the whole region of relevance between ROS and RA. Taken together, we hypothesize that ROS accompanied with ferroptosis may function as a reciprocal with cell death that interplays with RA; besides, FSP1 might become a potential therapeutic target for RA because of its potential interaction with TNF-alpha/ROS-positive feedback loop. This review systematically concludes the previous understandings about identification of ROS and FSP1 and, in turn, aims to provide references for further achievements of them and hints on elucidation of its thorough underlying mechanisms.

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