1. Academic Validation
  2. The antipsychotic drug thiothixene stimulates macrophages to clear pathogenic cells by inducing arginase 1 and continual efferocytosis

The antipsychotic drug thiothixene stimulates macrophages to clear pathogenic cells by inducing arginase 1 and continual efferocytosis

  • Sci Signal. 2025 Apr 8;18(881):eads6584. doi: 10.1126/scisignal.ads6584.
Yoko Kojima 1 Zhongde Ye 1 Fudi Wang 1 Mozhgan Lotfi 1 Caitlin Fox Bell 1 Shaunak Sanjay Adkar 1 Lingfeng Luo 1 Changhao Fu 1 Nicholas J Leeper 1
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Department of Surgery, Division of Vascular Surgery, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, CA, USA.
Abstract

Stimulating efferocytosis, the phagocytic removal of apoptotic cells by macrophages, has been proposed as a method to eliminate dying or dead cells that accumulate and contribute to diseases such as Cancer, atherosclerosis, and Infection. Toxicity related to the off-target clearance of healthy tissue has led to the premature termination of multiple clinical programs for proefferocytic therapies. To identify potential proefferocytic therapies with established risk profiles, we screened ~3000 US Food and Drug Administration (FDA)-approved drugs and Other well-characterized compounds for their capacity to stimulate efferocytosis. We found that the antipsychotic drug thiothixene stimulated efferocytosis of apoptotic and lipid-laden cells by mouse and human macrophages and enhanced the continual efferocytosis of apoptotic cells. Consistent with thiothixene's suppressive effects on dopaminergic signaling, dopamine potently inhibited efferocytosis in a manner that was only partially reversed by thiothixene. The prophagocytic effects of thiothixene in mouse macrophages depended on increased expression of the gene encoding the retinol-binding protein receptor Stra6L, which, in turn, promoted the production of the continual efferocytosis stimulator Arginase 1. Our findings demonstrate that dopamine inhibits efferocytosis in macrophages and identify thiothixene, a generic, FDA-approved antipsychotic drug that has been in use for more than 50 years, as a promising candidate for promoting continual efferocytosis and the removal of diseased tissue.

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