posted on 2025-01-03, 16:18authored byXiangji Li, Yangmei Li, Junxuan Xu, Xinlian Lu, Shixiang Ma, Lan Sun, Chao Chang, Li Min, Chunhai Fan
Ferroptosis
is a classic type of programmed cell death
characterized
by iron dependence, which is closely associated with many diseases
such as cancer, intestinal ischemic diseases, and nervous system diseases.
Transferrin (Tf) is responsible for ferric-ion delivery owing to its
natural Fe3+ binding ability and plays a crucial role in
ferroptosis. However, Tf is not considered as a classic druggable
target for ferroptosis-associated diseases since systemic perturbation
of Tf would dramatically disrupt blood iron homeostasis. Here, we
reported a nonpharmaceutical, noninvasive, and Tf-targeted electromagnetic
intervention technique capable of desensitizing ferroptosis with directivity.
First, we revealed that the THz radiation had the ability to significantly
decrease binding affinity between the Fe3+ and Tf via molecular
dynamics simulations, and the modulation was strongly wavelength-dependent.
This result provides theoretical feasibility for the THz modulation-based
ferroptosis intervention. Subsequent extracellular and cellular chromogenic
activity assays indicated that the THz field at 8.7 μm (i.e.,
34.5 THz) inhibited the most Fe3+ bound to the Tf, and
the wavelength was in good agreement with the simulated one. Then,
functional assays demonstrated that levels of intracellular Fe2+, lipid peroxidation, malondialdehyde (MDA) and cell death
were all significantly reduced in cells treated with this 34.5 THz
wave. Furthermore, the iron deposition, lipid peroxidation, and MDA
in the ferroptosis disease model induced by ischemia-reperfusion injury
could be nearly eliminated by the same radiation, validating THz wave-induced
desensitization of ferroptosis in vivo. Together,
this work provides a preclinical exemplar for electromagnetic irradiation-stimulated
desensitization of ferroptosis and predicts an innovative, THz wave-based
therapeutic method for ferroptosis-associated diseases in the future.