Abstract
BackgroundMetabolic reprograming, non-mutational epigenetic changes, increased cell plasticity, and multidrug tolerance are early hallmarks of therapy resistance in cancer. In this temporary, therapy-tolerant state, cancer cells are highly sensitive to ferroptosis, a form of regulated cell death that is caused by oxidative stress through excess levels of iron-dependent peroxidation of polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA). However, mechanisms underpinning therapy-induced ferroptosis hypersensitivity remain to be elucidated.MethodsWe used quantitative single-cell imaging of fluorescent metabolic probes, transcriptomics, proteomics, and lipidomics to perform a longitudinal analysis of the adaptive response to androgen receptor-targeted therapies (androgen deprivation and enzalutamide) in prostate cancer (PCa).ResultsWe discovered that cessation of cell proliferation and a robust reduction in bioenergetic processes were associated with multidrug tolerance and a strong accumulation of lipids. The gain in lipid biomass was fueled by enhanced lipid uptake through cargo non-selective (macropinocytosis, tunneling nanotubes) and cargo-selective mechanisms (lipid transporters), whereas de novo lipid synthesis was strongly reduced. Enzalutamide induced extensive lipid remodeling of all major phospholipid classes at the expense of storage lipids, leading to increased desaturation and acyl chain length of membrane lipids. The rise in membrane PUFA levels enhanced membrane fluidity and lipid peroxidation, causing hypersensitivity to glutathione peroxidase (GPX4) inhibition and ferroptosis. Combination treatments against AR and fatty acid desaturation, lipase activities, or growth medium supplementation with antioxidants or PUFAs altered GPX4 dependence.ConclusionsOur work provides mechanistic insight into processes of lipid metabolism that underpin the acquisition of therapy-induced GPX4 dependence and ferroptosis hypersensitivity to standard of care therapies in PCa. It demonstrates novel strategies to suppress the therapy-tolerant state that may have potential to delay and combat resistance to androgen receptor-targeted therapies, a currently unmet clinical challenge of advanced PCa. Since enhanced GPX4 dependence is an adaptive phenotype shared by several types of cancer in response to different therapies, our work might have universal implications for our understanding of metabolic events that underpin resistance to cancer therapies.
Highlights
Metabolic reprograming, non-mutational epigenetic changes, increased cell plasticity, and multidrug tolerance are early hallmarks of therapy resistance in cancer
Our work provides mechanistic insight into processes of lipid metabolism that underpin the acquisition of therapy-induced Glutathione peroxidase 4 (GPX4) dependence and ferroptosis hypersensitivity to standard of care therapies in prostate cancer (PCa)
Pairwise sequential comparisons of transcriptome data generated from samples taken prior and 7, 14, and 21 days post commencement of Enz treatment showed that LNCaP cells reached transcriptional stasis after 14 days of Enz, i.e., the set of 4524 differentially expressed genes (D0 vs D14) remained unchanged when compared to 21 days Enz (D0 vs D21, Fig. 2a)
Summary
Non-mutational epigenetic changes, increased cell plasticity, and multidrug tolerance are early hallmarks of therapy resistance in cancer. In this temporary, therapy-tolerant state, cancer cells are highly sensitive to ferroptosis, a form of regulated cell death that is caused by oxidative stress through excess levels of iron-dependent peroxidation of polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA). ATTs will fail in most PCa patients, and disease progresses to castrate-resistant PCa (CRPC) [3, 4] in which PCa cells have often adopted a number of complex resistance mechanisms, including AR amplification, mutation, or splice variants to maintain AR function in the low androgen environment [3, 5]. Understanding the early underlying molecular mechanisms that result in resistance to ATTs is critical for the discovery and development of co-treatment strategies and the definition of therapeutic windows to extend the efficacy of ATTs and combat therapy resistance
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