Abstract

Simple SummaryFerroptosis is increasingly recognized as a promising avenue for cancer therapy, while the biomarkers that predict the sensitivity and/or resistance of ferroptosis and the molecular mechanisms that can be therapeutically exploited to modulate ferroptosis are not yet known. Here, we perform an integrated pharmacotranscriptomic analysis to systematically identify compounds and gene networks that regulate ferroptosis. Our results provide mechanistic insights into the deregulation of ferroptosis in cancer and suggest new approaches for ferroptosis-based cancer therapy.(1) Background: Ferroptosis is an apoptosis-independent cell death program implicated in many diseases including cancer. Emerging evidence suggests ferroptosis as a promising avenue for cancer therapy, but the paucity of mechanistic understanding of ferroptosis regulation and lack of biomarkers for sensitivity to ferroptosis inducers have significantly hampered the utility of ferroptosis-based therapy. (2) Methods: We performed integrated dataset analysis by correlating the sensitivity of small-molecule compounds (n = 481) against the transcriptomes of solid cancer cell lines (n = 659) to identify drug candidates with the potential to induce ferroptosis. Generalizable gene signatures of ferroptosis sensitivity and resistance are defined by interrogating drug effects of ferroptosis inducers (n = 7) with transcriptomic data of pan-solid cancer cells. (3) Results: We report, for the first time, the comprehensive identification of drug compounds that induce ferroptosis and the delineation of generalizable gene signatures of pro- and anti-ferroptosis in pan-cancer. We further reveal that small cell lung cancer (SCLC) and isocitrate dehydrogenase (IDH1/2)-mutant brain tumors show enrichment of pro-ferroptosis gene signature, suggesting a unique vulnerability of SCLC and IDH-mutant tumors to ferroptosis inducers. Finally, we demonstrate that targeting class I histone deacetylase (HDAC) significantly enhances ferroptotic cell death caused by Erastin, an ferroptosis inducer, in lung cancer cells, revealing a previously underappreciated role for HDAC in ferroptosis regulation. (4) Conclusions: Our work reveals novel drug compounds and gene networks that regulate ferroptosis in cancer, which sheds light on the mechanisms of ferroptosis and may facilitate biomarker-guided stratification for ferroptosis-based therapy.

Highlights

  • Escape from cell death is fundamental for cancer development

  • Containing FDA-approved drugs, clinical candidates and those interrogating important targets and/or cellular processes in cancer, against the transcriptomes of a cohort of pan-cancer cell lines (n = 659) [20]. This analysis revealed that gene expression of SLC7A11 most strongly positively correlates with the area under the curve (AUC), a measure of drug sensitivity determined by fitted

  • To curate a generalized gene signature for ferroptosis sensitivity, we focused on the candidates common to all tested drugs

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Summary

Introduction

Escape from cell death is fundamental for cancer development. Ferroptosis is a new form of programmed cell death genetically and biochemically different from apoptosis, necroptosis and autophagy-mediated death programs [1,2]. Ferroptosis is negatively regulated by a lipid radical-specific antioxidant defense system such as glutathione peroxidase 4 (GPX4) that hydrolyzes lipid hydroperoxides and thereby protects cells from ferroptosis [5]. Antagonizing GPX4 with small molecules, such as the rat sarcoma viral oncogene homolog (RAS)-selective lethal 3 (RSL3), efficiently induces ferroptosis [1]. The reductase activity of GPX4 requires the co-factor glutathione (GSH), an abundant cellular tripeptide consisting of glycine, glutamate, and cysteine, as an electron donor to reduce lipid hydroperoxides. As cysteine is imported extracellularly via the sodium-independent cystine/glutamate antiporter system xc-, a heterodimer consisting of a heavy chain (4F2, known as SLC3A2) and a light chain (xCT or SLC7A11) [2], targeting xCT/SLC7A11, e.g., by the small-molecule inhibitor Erastin, restrains cystine supply and provokes ferroptosis [1,2]

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