4.8 Article

Transferrin ensures survival of ovarian carcinoma cells when apoptosis is induced by TNFα, FasL, TRAIL, or Myc

Journal

ONCOGENE
Volume 22, Issue 51, Pages 8343-8355

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/sj.onc.1207047

Keywords

transferrin; apoptosis; TNF alpha; myc; survival; ovarian cancer

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The activation of Myc induces apoptosis of human ovarian adenocarcinoma N.1 cells when serum factors are limited. However, the downstream mechanism that is triggered by Myc is unknown. Myc-activation and treatment with the proapoptotic ligands TNFalpha, FasL, and TRAIL induced H-ferritin expression under serum-deprived conditions. H-ferritin chelates intracellular iron and also intracellular iron sequestration by deferoxamine-induced apoptosis of N.1 cells. Supplementation of serum-free medium with holo-transferrin blocked apoptosis of N.1 cells that was induced by Myc-activation or by treatment with TNFalpha, FasL, and TRAIL, whereas apotransferrin did not prevent apoptosis. This suggests that intracellular iron depletion was a trigger for apoptosis and that transferrin-bound iron rescued N.1 cells. Furthermore, apoptosis of primary human ovarian carcinoma cells, which was induced by TNFalpha, FasL, and TRAIL, was also inhibited by holotransferrin. The data suggest that Myc-activation, FasL, TNFalpha, and TRAIL disturbed cellular iron homeostasis, which triggered apoptosis of ovarian carcinoma cells and that transferrin iron ensured survival by re-establishing this homeostasis.

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