iPLA2β-mediated lipid detoxification controls p53-driven ferroptosis independent of GPX4

Delin Chen(Cancer Genetics (United States)), Bo Chu(Cancer Genetics (United States)), Xin Yang(Cancer Genetics (United States)), Zhaoqi Liu(Columbia University), Ying Jin(Cancer Genetics (United States)), Ning Kon(Cancer Genetics (United States)), Raúl Rabadán(Columbia University), Xuejun Jiang(Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center), Brent R. Stockwell(Columbia University), Wei Gu(Cancer Genetics (United States))
Nature Communications
June 15, 2021
Cited by 324Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Here, we identify iPLA2β as a critical regulator for p53-driven ferroptosis upon reactive oxygen species (ROS)-induced stress. The calcium-independent phospholipase iPLA2β is known to cleave acyl tails from the glycerol backbone of lipids and release oxidized fatty acids from phospholipids. We found that iPLA2β-mediated detoxification of peroxidized lipids is sufficient to suppress p53-driven ferroptosis upon ROS-induced stress, even in GPX4-null cells. Moreover, iPLA2β is overexpressed in human cancers; inhibition of endogenous iPLA2β sensitizes tumor cells to p53-driven ferroptosis and promotes p53-dependent tumor suppression in xenograft mouse models. These results demonstrate that iPLA2β acts as a major ferroptosis repressor in a GPX4-independent manner. Notably, unlike GPX4, loss of iPLA2β has no obvious effect on normal development or cell viability in normal tissues but iPLA2β plays an essential role in regulating ferroptosis upon ROS-induced stress. Thus, our study suggests that iPLA2β is a promising therapeutic target for activating ferroptosis-mediated tumor suppression without serious toxicity concerns.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis