Ferroptosis, a newly identified iron-dependent form of cell death, has recently been implicated in the pathogenesis of Parkinson's disease (PD). Dl-3-n-butylphthalide (NBP) attenuates behavioral and cognitive deficits in animal models of PD. However, the potential of NBP to prevent dopaminergic neuron death by suppressing ferroptosis has rarely been explored. In this study, we aimed to investigate the effects of NBP on ferroptosis in erastin-induced dopaminergic neurons (MES23.5 cells) and the underlying mechanisms involved in these effects. Our results demonstrated that erastin significantly decreased viability of MES23.5 dopaminergic neurons in a dose-dependent manner, which was reversible by ferroptosis inhibitors. We further verified that NBP protected erastin-treated MES23.5 cells from death by inhibiting ferroptosis. Erastin increased the mitochondrial membrane density, caused lipid peroxidation, and decreased GPX4 expression in MES23.5 cells, which could be reversed by NBP preconditioning. NBP pretreatment suppressed erastin-induced labile iron accumulation and reactive oxygen species generation. Moreover, we demonstrated that erastin significantly reduced FTH expression, and pre-administration with NBP promoted Nrf2 translocation into the nucleus and increased the protein level of FTH. Additionally, the expression of LC3B-II in MES23.5 cells pretreated with NBP before administration of erastin was lower than that in cells treated with erastin alone. NBP reduced colocalization of FTH and autophagosomes in MES23.5 cells exposed to erastin. Finally, erastin gradually inhibited NCOA4 expression in a time-dependent manner, which was reversible by NBP pretreatment. Taken together, these results indicated that NBP suppressed ferroptosis via regulating FTH expression, which was achieved by promoting Nrf2 nuclear translocation and inhibiting NCOA4-mediated ferritinophagy. As such, NBP may be a promising therapeutic agent for the treatment of neurological diseases associated with ferroptosis.
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