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Ferroptosis: a new target for hepatic ischemia-reperfusion injury?

Shanshan Guo, Zexin Li, Yi Liu, Ying Cheng, Degong Jia

2024Free Radical Research15 citationsDOI

Abstract

Ischemia-reperfusion injury (IRI) can seriously affect graft survival and prognosis and is an unavoidable event during liver transplantation. Ferroptosis is a novel iron-dependent form of cell death characterized by iron accumulation and overwhelming lipid peroxidation; it differs morphologically, genetically, and biochemically from other well-known cell death types (autophagy, necrosis, and apoptosis). Accumulating evidence has shown that ferroptosis is involved in the pathogenesis of hepatic IRI, and targeting ferroptosis may be a promising therapeutic approach. Here, we review the pathways and phenomena involved in ferroptosis, explore the associations and implications of ferroptosis and hepatic IRI, and discuss possible strategies for modulating ferroptosis to alleviate the hepatic IRI.

Topics & Concepts

Programmed cell deathAutophagyGPX4Lipid peroxidationApoptosisReperfusion injuryPathogenesisNecrosisIschemiaCancer researchTransplantationCellBiologyMedicineCell biologyOxidative stressImmunologyPathologyBiochemistryInternal medicineSuperoxide dismutaseGlutathione peroxidaseFerroptosis and cancer prognosisMicroRNA in disease regulationCircular RNAs in diseases
Ferroptosis: a new target for hepatic ischemia-reperfusion injury? | Litcius