Mariantonietta D’Ambrosio, Matthew E. H. White, Efthymios S. Gavriil, Laura Bousset, Jodie Birch, Aleksandra Gruevska, Emiliano Pasquini, Manuel Colucci, Winnie Fong, Simone Mosole, Aurora Valdata, Dimitris Veroutis, Katie Tyson, Vikas Ranvir, Sandra Prokosch, Joaquim Pombo, Aoki Ardisson, Sanjay Khadayate, George Young, Alex Montoya, Georgia Roumelioti, Jack Houghton, Jianan Lu, Pavel V. Shliaha, Elena De Vita, Santiago Vernia, Vassilis G. Gorgoulis, Suchira Gallage, Mathias Heikenwälder, Zoe Hall, Andrea Alimonti, Iain A. McNeish, Edward W. Tate, Jesús Gil
Nature Chemical Biology, 2026
Journal: Nature Cell BiologySenescent cells drive ageing and age-related pathologies, including cancer. Consequently, senolytics, drugs that selectively kill senescent cells, have broad therapeutic appeal. Here we report a senolytic screen of a library of 10,480 electrophilic compounds. Among 38 identified hits, we found a subset of chloroacetamides with broad senolytic activity. Activity-based protein profiling, coupled with functional assays, identified the glutathione peroxidase GPX4 as a target. We show that senescent cells are primed for ferroptosis, displaying high levels of oxidative stress and intracellular Fe2+, but also upregulate GPX4, which prevents the accumulation of oxidized lipids. Treatment with senolytic chloroacetamides or GPX4 inhibitors selectively kills senescent cells by ferroptosis. The combination of anticancer therapies with GPX4 inhibitors eliminated senescent tumour cells in models of melanoma, prostate and ovarian cancer. Our results show that senescent cells rely on GPX4 to prevent ferroptosis and that GPX4 inhibitors kill senescent cells.