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Thymosin β4 Is an Endogenous Iron Chelator and Molecular Switcher of Ferroptosis. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Thymosin β4 (Tβ4) is a protein discovered from calf thymus that plays multiple roles in blood clotting, tissue regeneration, and inflammation, but its mechanisms are not fully understood.
  • Recent research shows that Tβ4 could influence ferroptosis, a type of cell death linked to neurodegeneration and cancer cell survival, by acting as an iron chelator in cellular environments.
  • These findings suggest that carefully regulating Tβ4 levels could lead to new treatment strategies for cancer and degenerative diseases by potentially controlling ferroptosis.

Article Abstract

Thymosin β4 (Tβ4) was extracted forty years agofrom calf thymus. Since then, it has been identified as a G-actin binding protein involved in blood clotting, tissue regeneration, angiogenesis, and anti-inflammatory processes. Tβ4 has also been implicated in tumor metastasis and neurodegeneration. However, the precise roles and mechanism(s) of action of Tβ4 in these processes remain largely unknown, with the binding of the G-actin protein being insufficient to explain these multi-actions. Here we identify for the first time the important role of Tβ4 mechanism in ferroptosis, an iron-dependent form of cell death, which leads to neurodegeneration and somehow protects cancer cells against cell death. Specifically, we demonstrate four iron and iron binding regions along the peptide and show that the presence of Tβ4 in cell growing medium inhibits erastin and glutamate-induced ferroptosis in the macrophage cell line. Moreover, Tβ4 increases the expression of oxidative stress-related genes, namely BAX, hem oxygenase-1, heat shock protein 70 and thioredoxin reductase 1, which are downregulated during ferroptosis. We state the hypothesis that Tβ4 is an endogenous iron chelator and take part in iron homeostasis in the ferroptosis process. We discuss the literature data of parallel involvement of Tβ4 and ferroptosis in different human pathologies, mainly cancer and neurodegeneration. Our findings confronted with literature data show that controlled Tβ4 release could command on/off switching of ferroptosis and may provide novel therapeutic opportunities in cancer and tissue degeneration pathologies.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8745404PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms23010551DOI Listing

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