͵͵

Annual Meeting

Dixon uncovers a new type of cell death

He's won the ASBMB’s 2023 Earl and Thressa Stadtman Young Scholar Award.
Renae   Crossing
Oct. 18, 2022

“Initially, no one believes you,” Scott Dixon said. “The first time I gave a presentation about ferroptosis at a cell death conference and used that word, there were audible groans in the audience.”

Yet scientists may one day induce ferroptosis in cancer, causing tumor cells to die, or put a stop to it in Lou Gehrig’s disease, helping nerve cells to survive.

Scott Dixon

For spearheading the identification of and its ever since, Dixon has been awarded the ͵͵ and ͵͵ Biology’s 2023 Earl and Thressa Stadtman Young Scholar Award.

In a nomination letter for Dixon, Brent Stockwell, a professor at Columbia University, wrote, “We learned more from his work on an erastin-driven cell death mechanism in two years than we cumulatively learned … over the preceding 11 years.”

Dixon wasn’t always decided on science.

“I won’t pretend that I had the junior chemistry kit,” he said. In fact, he didn’t get excited about lab work until his third or fourth undergraduate year. Experiments in a lab course are “often a canned thing that people have been doing for decades, and it can feel a little bit unexciting,” he said.

“But then you listen to a graduate teaching assistant tell you what they’re doing … how they’re building on some of this fundamental understanding to examine something really new … You can’t help but get excited.”

The words of graduate students grabbed him. “I realized I would like to experience research in that way and really ask a question that no one else has asked and see what kind of answers we can get.”

Dixon has distributed tools that activate or inhibit ferroptosis so that other scientists can study it themselves. “Anyone can test this phenotype,” he said. “Then they can see, ‘Oh, wow. This actually turns up here, and it turns up here, and it turns up here.’”

Bulking and shredding

Ferroptosis comes from the words “ferro,” meaning iron, and “ptosis,” meaning dropping off (like leaves from a tree).

Before such a death, the inside of a cell swells. Eventually the membrane is “shredded,” Dixon said. It’s .

"If you’d asked people in the 1990s if it was possible for there to be a non-apoptotic form of cell death that is also regulated, the answer would generally have been no,” Dixon said.

By the 2010s, hints existed in the literature, he said. established the concept that there are nonapoptotic ways for cells to die that still require genetic and biochemical regulation.

“So, that cracked open the area quite widely for many others, including ourselves, to go on a few years later and propose additional mechanisms that weren’t apoptosis, or (were) distinct from necroptosis, and say, well, this isn’t such a crazy idea that there would be a novel mechanism.”

Seeking examples of oxidation or the loss of certain metabolites associated with cell death, Dixon found older papers describing similar phenotypes.

His reaction? “Oh, that sounds a lot like ferroptosis,” Dixon said. In some cases, the work was from decades ago, even before people realized that cell death is regulated.

“We just put the pieces together.”

Sometimes, when cells fall apart, ideas come together.

For the most well-known type of cell death, apoptosis, “We’ve gone all the way from a fundamental, basic understanding to translating that knowledge into treatments for people,” Dixon said; while for pathways discovered more recently, including ferroptosis, “We’re in the middle of that process.”

At Discover BMB 2023, Dixon will present an update on the field of cell death.

2023 ASBMB award winners

Gira Bhabha: ASBMB Early-Career Leadership Award
Bhabha found creativity in hard science

Squire J. Booker: ASBMB–Merck Award / Ruth Kirschstein Diversity in Science Award
Booker catalyzes progress in science and outreach

Itay Budin: Walter A. Shaw Young Investigator Award in Lipid Research
Budin dives into the details

Russell DeBose-Boyd: Avanti Award in Lipids
DeBose–Boyd has a recipe for success

Catherine Drennan: William C. Rose Award
Drennan makes science fun and accessible

Anne Kenworthy: Mildred Cohn Award in Biological Chemistry
Kenworthy links quantity to theory

Keith Matthews: Alice and C.C. Wang Award in ͵͵ Parasitology
Matthews’ career-long search for truth

Eytan Ruppin: DeLano Award for Computational Biosciences
Ruppin synthesizes cross-field expertise to study synthetic lethality

Kerry-Anne Rye: ASBMB Mid-Career Leadership Award
Rye offers tools for success

Regina Stevens-Truss: ASBMB Award for Exemplary Contributions to Education
K-12 to undergrad, Stevens–Truss helps all students

Erica Ollmann Saphire: Bert & Natalie Vallee Award in Biomedical Science
Saphire is on the forefront of antibody therapeutics

Ajit Varki: Herbert Tabor Research Award
Varki seeks clues in chimps, grandmothers and sialic acid

Dyann Wirth: Alice and C.C. Wang Award in ͵͵ Parasitology
Wirth focuses on parasitology and policy

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Renae   Crossing

Renae Crossing is a writer and former teacher. She holds a first-class master’s degree in life science from the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology and a first-class master’s in teaching from the University of Melbourne.

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