Ferroptosis: Shedding Light on Mechanisms and Therapeutic Opportunities in Liver Diseases

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Abstract

Cell death is a vital physiological or pathological phenomenon in the development process of the organism. Ferroptosis is a kind of newly-discovered regulated cell death (RCD), which is different from other RCD patterns, such as apoptosis, necrosis and autophagy at the morphological, biochemical and genetic levels. It is a kind of iron-dependent mode of death mediated by lipid peroxides and lipid reactive oxygen species aggregation. Noteworthily, the number of studies focused on ferroptosis has been increasing exponentially since ferroptosis was first found in 2012. The liver is the organ that stores the most iron in the human body. Recently, it was frequently found that there are different degrees of iron metabolism disorder and lipid peroxidation and other ferroptosis characteristics in various liver diseases. Numerous investigators have discovered that the progression of various liver diseases can be affected via the regulation of ferroptosis, which may provide a potential therapeutic strategy for clinical hepatic diseases. This review aims to summarize the mechanism and update research progress of ferroptosis, so as to provide novel promising directions for the treatment of liver diseases.

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You, H., Wang, L., Bu, F., Meng, H., Huang, C., Fang, G., & Li, J. (2022, October 1). Ferroptosis: Shedding Light on Mechanisms and Therapeutic Opportunities in Liver Diseases. Cells. MDPI. https://doi.org/10.3390/cells11203301

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