Cell Death Discovery (Feb 2022)
Oxeiptosis: a novel pathway of melanocytes death in response to oxidative stress in vitiligo
Abstract
Abstract Vitiligo is a cutaneous depigmenting autoimmune disease caused by the extensive destruction of epidermal melanocytes. Convincing data has defined a critical role for oxidative stress in the pathogenesis of vitiligo. Oxeiptosis is a caspase-independent cell death modality that was reportedly triggered by oxidative stress and operative in pathogen clearance. However, whether oxeiptosis exists in oxidative stress-induced melanocytes demise in vitiligo remains undetermined. In the present study, we initially found that other cell death modalities might exist in addition to the well-recognized apoptosis and necroptosis in H2O2-treated melanocytes. Furthermore, AIFM1 was found to be dephosphorylated at Ser116 in oxidative stress-induced melanocytes death, which was specific to oxeiptosis. Moreover, KEAP1 and PGAM5, upstream of the AIFM1 in oxeiptosis, were found to operate in melanocytic death. Subsequently, the KEAP1-PGAM5-AIFM1 signaling pathway was proved to be involved in oxidative stress-triggered melanocytes demise through the depletion of KEAP1 and PGAM5. Altogether, our study indicated that oxeiptosis might occur in melanocytes death under oxidative stress and contribute to the pathogenesis of vitiligo.