4.6 Article

Induction of ferroptosis selectively eliminates senescent tubular cells

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF TRANSPLANTATION
Volume 22, Issue 9, Pages 2158-2168

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/ajt.17102

Keywords

cell death; ferroptosis; gpx4; kidney transplantation; organ perfusion and preservation; senescence; senolysis; senotherapy; solid organ transplantation

Funding

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [ME 3696/5-1, SCHM2146/10-1, SFB-TRR 205, SFB-TRR 127, SPP2306, IRTG 2251, SCHM2146]

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Using the ferroptosis-inducer RSL3 selectively eliminated senescent cells in tissue slice cultures from aged kidneys, while leaving healthy tubular cells unaffected. In a transplantation model, RSL3 reduced the senescent cell burden of aged donor kidneys and caused a reduction of damage and inflammatory cell infiltration during the early post-transplantation period.
The accumulation of senescent cells is an important contributor to kidney aging, chronic renal disease, and poor outcome after kidney transplantation. Approaches to eliminate senescent cells with senolytic compounds have been proposed as novel strategies to improve marginal organs. While most existing senolytics induce senescent cell clearance by apoptosis, we observed that ferroptosis, an iron-catalyzed subtype of regulated necrosis, might serve as an alternative way to ablate senescent cells. We found that murine kidney tubular epithelial cells became sensitized to ferroptosis when turning senescent. This was linked to increased expression of pro-ferroptotic lipoxygenase-5 and reduced expression of anti-ferroptotic glutathione peroxidase 4 (GPX4). In tissue slice cultures from aged kidneys low dose application of the ferroptosis-inducer RSL3 selectively eliminated senescent cells while leaving healthy tubular cells unaffected. Similar results were seen in a transplantation model, in which RSL3 reduced the senescent cell burden of aged donor kidneys and caused a reduction of damage and inflammatory cell infiltration during the early post-transplantation period. In summary, these data reveal an increased susceptibility of senescent tubular cells to ferroptosis with the potential to be exploited for selective reduction of renal senescence in aged kidney transplants.

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