4.5 Article

NCOA4-mediated ferritinophagy promotes ferroptosis induced by erastin, but not by RSL3 in HeLa cells

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.bbamcr.2020.118913

Keywords

Ferroptosis; Ferritin; Iron; Ferritinophagy; NCOA4

Funding

  1. University of Brescia
  2. Associazione Garda Vita with Roberto Tosoni Fellowship 2018-2019
  3. Fondazione Umberto Veronesi with Post-Doctoral Fellowship 2020
  4. Associazione Italiana per la Ricerca sul Cancro, AIRC Fellowship, for Italy [22482]

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This study found that NCOA4 deficiency increases ferritin levels and makes cells more resistant to erastin but more sensitive to RSL3. Erastin promotes ferritinophagy, increasing free iron, lipid peroxidation, and sensitivity to ferroptosis, while RSL3 mechanism is independent of ferritin degradation process. The release of ferritin-iron in the execution of ferroptosis seems to depend on the inducing compound, its target, and downstream pathway of cell death activation.
Ferroptosis is a regulated cell death characterized by a lethal accumulation of lipid peroxides due to an increase of intracellular iron and a decrease of antioxidant capacity. The reduction of antioxidant activity is obtained by using chemical agents, such as erastin and RSL3, the first one inhibiting the transmembrane cystine-glutamate antiporter causing a cysteine and glutathione depletion and the second one inactivating directly the glutathione peroxidase 4 (GPX4) respectively. The role of iron and its related proteins in supporting the formation of lipid peroxides, is not completely understood hence to try to shed light on it we generated HeLa clones with altered ferritinophagy, the ferritin degradation process, by knocking-out or overexpressing Nuclear Receptor Coactivator 4 (NCOA4), the ferritin autophagic cargo-receptor. NCOA4 deficiency abolished ferritinophagy increasing ferritin level and making the cells more resistant to erastin, but unexpectedly more sensitive to RSL3. Interestingly, we found that erastin promoted ferritinophagy in HeLa cells expressing NCOA4, increasing the free iron, lipid peroxidation and the sensitivity to ferroptosis. In contrast, RSL3 did not modulate ferritinophagy, while NCOA4 overexpression delayed RSL3-induced cell death suggesting that RSL3 mechanism of action is independent of ferritin degradation process. Therefore, the ferritin-iron release in the execution of ferroptosis seems to depend on the inducing compound, its target and downstream pathway of cell death activation.

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