Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
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ENPP2 protects cardiomyocytes from erastin-induced ferroptosis.

Ferroptosis is an iron- and oxidative-dependent form of regulated cell death and may play important roles in maintaining myocardium homeostasis and pathology of cardiovascular diseases. Currently, the regulatory roles of lipid signals in regulating cardiomyocytes ferroptosis has not been explored. In this study, we show that ENPP2, as a lipid kinase involved in lipid metabolism, protects against erastin-induced ferroptosis in cardiomyocytes. The classical ferroptosis inducer erastin remarkably inhibits the growth which could be rescued by the small molecule Fer-1 in H9c2 cells. Adenovirus mediated ENPP2 overexpression modestly promotes migration and proliferation and significantly inhibits erastin-induced ferroptosis of H9c2 cells. ENPP2 overexpression leads to increase the LPA level in supernatant of H9c2 cells. H9c2 cells express the LPAR1, LPAR3, LPAR4 and LPAR5 receptors. The supernatant of ENPP2 transduced cardiomyocytes could protects the cells from erastin-induced ferroptosis of H9c2 cells. Furthermore, we observed that ENPP2 overexpression regulates ferroptosis-associated gene GPX4, ACSL4 and NRF2 expression and modulates MAPK and AKT signal in H9c2 cells. Collectively, these findings demonstrated that ENPP2/LPA protects cardiomyocytes from erastin-induced ferroptosis through modulating GPX4, ACSL4 and NRF2 expression and enhancing AKT survival signal.

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