Ferroptosis has emerged as a deliberate type of programmed cell death that manifests marked importance ubiquitously in health and diseases. However, after a decade of research, the mechanisms of ferroptosis execution remain unclear. Here we identify chloride ions (Cl-) as essential determinants of ferroptosis. Water homeostasis manipulated by extracellular solute concentration disrupts ferroptotic cell death. Hyperosmotic stress attenuates ferroptosis and endues cells with high lipid peroxidation. Analyses of a fluorescent chloride probe show that Cl- fluxes into the cytoplasm during ferroptosis, substantiating a role for Cl- to drive water flow. Depletion of extracellular chloride ions ([Cl-]o) from culture media congruously confers resistance to ferroptosis. The [Cl-]o-depleted ferroptotic cells fall into two populations: cells with low lipid peroxidation; cells with high lipid peroxidation but not cell swelling or cell rupture. Contrarily, solitary [Cl-]o overload is sufficient to elicit ferroptosis without canonical ferroptosis inducers. Further experiments show that ferroptotic cells depolarize and [Cl-]o is positively correlated with this process. Membrane depolarization upregulates the level of lipid peroxidation, suggesting that membrane potential may be a universal mechanism governing ferroptosis. Together, our findings reveal that ferroptosis is determined by chloride ions.
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