4.8 Article

NFS1 undergoes positive selection in lung tumours and protects cells from ferroptosis

Journal

NATURE
Volume 551, Issue 7682, Pages 639-+

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nature24637

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [T32GM007308, T32GM115313, CA168940, CA193660, CA103866, CA129105, AI07389]
  2. Starr Cancer Consortium
  3. Broad Institute SPARC
  4. Leukemia and Lymphoma Society
  5. V Foundation
  6. Pew-Stewart Scholar Grant
  7. Susan G. Komen for the Cure
  8. NIH [P30CA016087, S10 OD010584-01, S10 OD018338, S10 OD016304]

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Environmental nutrient levels impact cancer cell metabolism, resulting in context-dependent gene essentiality(1,2). Here, using loss-of-function screening based on RNA interference, we show that environmental oxygen levels are a major driver of differential essentiality between in vitro model systems and in vivo tumours. Above the 3-8% oxygen concentration typical of most tissues, we find that cancer cells depend on high levels of the iron-sulfur cluster biosynthetic enzyme NFS1. Mammary or subcutaneous tumours grow despite suppression of NFS1, whereas metastatic or primary lung tumours do not. Consistent with a role in surviving the high oxygen environment of incipient lung tumours, NFS1 lies in a region of genomic amplification present in lung adenocarcinoma and is most highly expressed in well-differentiated adenocarcinomas. NFS1 activity is particularly important for maintaining the ironsulfur co-factors present in multiple cell-essential proteins upon exposure to oxygen compared to other forms of oxidative damage. Furthermore, insufficient iron-sulfur cluster maintenance robustly activates the iron-starvation response and, in combination with inhibition of glutathione biosynthesis, triggers ferroptosis, a non-apoptotic form of cell death. Suppression of NFS1 cooperates with inhibition of cysteine transport to trigger ferroptosis in vitro and slow tumour growth. Therefore, lung adenocarcinomas select for expression of a pathway that confers resistance to high oxygen tension and protects cells from undergoing ferroptosis in response to oxidative damage.

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