Radiotherapy and Immunotherapy Promote Tumoral Lipid Oxidation and Ferroptosis via Synergistic Repression of SLC7A11

Xueting Lang(University of Michigan), Michael D. Green(University of Michigan), Weimin Wang(Michigan Medicine), Jiali Yu(Michigan Medicine), Jae Eun Choi(University of Michigan), Long Jiang(University of Michigan), Peng Liao(Michigan Medicine), Jiajia Zhou(Michigan Medicine), Qiang Zhang(University of Michigan), Ania Dow(Michigan Medicine), Anjali L. Saripalli(University of Michigan), Ilona Kryczek(Michigan Medicine), Shuang Wei(Michigan Medicine), Wojciech Szeliga(Michigan Medicine), Linda Vatan(Michigan Medicine), Everett Stone(The University of Texas at Austin), George Georgiou(The University of Texas at Austin), Marcin Cieślik(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Daniel Wahl(University of Michigan), Meredith A. Morgan(University of Michigan), Arul M. Chinnaiyan(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Theodore S. Lawrence(University of Michigan), Weiping Zou(University of Michigan)
Cancer Discovery
September 25, 2019
Cited by 1,048Open Access
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Abstract

Abstract A challenge in oncology is to rationally and effectively integrate immunotherapy with traditional modalities, including radiotherapy. Here, we demonstrate that radiotherapy induces tumor-cell ferroptosis. Ferroptosis agonists augment and ferroptosis antagonists limit radiotherapy efficacy in tumor models. Immunotherapy sensitizes tumors to radiotherapy by promoting tumor-cell ferroptosis. Mechanistically, IFNγ derived from immunotherapy-activated CD8+ T cells and radiotherapy-activated ATM independently, yet synergistically, suppresses SLC7A11, a unit of the glutamate–cystine antiporter xc−, resulting in reduced cystine uptake, enhanced tumor lipid oxidation and ferroptosis, and improved tumor control. Thus, ferroptosis is an unappreciated mechanism and focus for the development of effective combinatorial cancer therapy. Significance: This article describes ferroptosis as a previously unappreciated mechanism of action for radiotherapy. Further, it shows that ferroptosis is a novel point of synergy between immunotherapy and radiotherapy. Finally, it nominates SLC7A11, a critical regulator of ferroptosis, as a mechanistic determinant of synergy between radiotherapy and immunotherapy. This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 1631


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