4.7 Article

Individual Expression of Hepatitis A Virus 3C Protease Induces Ferroptosis in Human Cells In Vitro

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms22157906

Keywords

hepatitis A virus 3C protease; regulated cell death; ferroptosis; transfection; transient expression; flow cytometry

Funding

  1. Kurchatov Genomic Center Development Program [075-15-2019-1664]
  2. Russian Foundation for Basic Research [19-04-00756]

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Regulated cell death (RCD) is a fundamental process common to all living beings, and recent research has shown that picornaviral 3C proteases and human hepatitis A virus 3C protease can induce different types of cell death with distinct cellular changes. Specifically, it has been demonstrated for the first time that 3Cpro can induce ferroptosis when expressed individually in human cells.
Regulated cell death (RCD) is a fundamental process common to nearly all living beings and essential for the development and tissue homeostasis in animals and humans. A wide range of molecules can induce RCD, including a number of viral proteolytic enzymes. To date, numerous data indicate that picornaviral 3C proteases can induce RCD. In most reported cases, these proteases induce classical caspase-dependent apoptosis. In contrast, the human hepatitis A virus 3C protease (3Cpro) has recently been shown to cause caspase-independent cell death accompanied by previously undescribed features. Here, we expressed 3Cpro in HEK293, HeLa, and A549 human cell lines to characterize 3Cpro-induced cell death morphologically and biochemically using flow cytometry and fluorescence microscopy. We found that dead cells demonstrated necrosis-like morphological changes including permeabilization of the plasma membrane, loss of mitochondrial potential, as well as mitochondria and nuclei swelling. Additionally, we showed that 3Cpro-induced cell death was efficiently blocked by ferroptosis inhibitors and was accompanied by intense lipid peroxidation. Taken together, these results indicate that 3Cpro induces ferroptosis upon its individual expression in human cells. This is the first demonstration that a proteolytic enzyme can induce ferroptosis, the recently discovered and actively studied type of RCD.

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