4.7 Article

Ferroptosis Mediates Cuprizone-Induced Loss of Oligodendrocytes and Demyelination

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 40, Issue 48, Pages 9327-9341

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1749-20.2020

Keywords

cell death; cuprizone; demyelination; ferroptosis; ferrostatin-1; oxidative damage

Categories

Funding

  1. Canadian Institutes of Health Research Grant [MOP-142231]
  2. Multiple Sclerosis Society of Canada
  3. Tier I Canada Research Chair
  4. Canadian Institutes of Health Research

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Multiple sclerosis (MS) is a chronic demyelinating disease of the CNS. Cuprizone (CZ), a copper chelator, is widely used to study demyelination and remyelination in the CNS, in the context of MS. However, the mechanisms underlying oligodendrocyte (OL) cell loss and demyelination are not known. As copper-containing enzymes play important roles in iron homeostasis and controlling oxidative stress, we examined whether chelating copper leads to disruption of molecules involved in iron homeostasis that can trigger iron-mediated OL loss. We show that giving mice (male) CZ in the diet induces rapid loss of OL in the corpus callosum by 2 d, accompanied by expression of several markers for ferroptosis, a relatively newly described form of iron-mediated cell death. In ferroptosis, iron-mediated free radicals trigger lipid peroxidation under conditions of glutathione insufficiency, and a reduced capacity to repair lipid damage. This was further confirmed using a small-molecule inhibitor of ferroptosis that prevents CZ-induced loss of OL and demyelination, providing clear evidence of a copper-iron connection in CZ-induced neurotoxicity. This work has wider implications for disorders, such as multiple sclerosis and CNS injury.

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