| Literature DB >> 34862195 |
Sylvain Garciaz1,2, Andrew A Guirguis1, Sebastian Müller3, Fiona C Brown4, Yih-Chih Chan1, Ali Motazedian1, Caitlin L Rowe5, James A Kuzich1, Kah Lok Chan1, Kevin Tran1, Lorey Smith1, Laura MacPherson1, Brian Liddicoat1, Enid Y N Lam1, Tatiana Cañeque3, Marian L Burr1, Véronique Litalien4, Giovanna Pomilio4, Mathilde Poplineau2, Estelle Duprez2, Sarah-Jane Dawson1,6, Georg Ramm7, Andrew G Cox1,8, Kristin K Brown1,8, David C S Huang9, Andrew H Wei4, Kate McArthur5, Raphaël Rodriguez3, Mark A Dawson1,6.
Abstract
Cancer cell metabolism is increasingly recognized as providing an exciting therapeutic opportunity. However, a drug that directly couples targeting of a metabolic dependency with the induction of cell death in cancer cells has largely remained elusive. Here we report that the drug-like small-molecule ironomycin reduces the mitochondrial iron load, resulting in the potent disruption of mitochondrial metabolism. Ironomycin promotes the recruitment and activation of BAX/BAK, but the resulting mitochondrial outer membrane permeabilization (MOMP) does not lead to potent activation of the apoptotic caspases, nor is the ensuing cell death prevented by inhibiting the previously established pathways of programmed cell death. Consistent with the fact that ironomycin and BH3 mimetics induce MOMP through independent nonredundant pathways, we find that ironomycin exhibits marked in vitro and in vivo synergy with venetoclax and overcomes venetoclax resistance in primary patient samples. SIGNIFICANCE: Ironomycin couples targeting of cellular metabolism with cell death by reducing mitochondrial iron, resulting in the alteration of mitochondrial metabolism and the activation of BAX/BAK. Ironomycin induces MOMP through a different mechanism to BH3 mimetics, and consequently combination therapy has marked synergy in cancers such as acute myeloid leukemia. This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 587. ©2021 The Authors; Published by the American Association for Cancer Research.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 34862195 DOI: 10.1158/2159-8290.CD-21-0522
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Discov ISSN: 2159-8274 Impact factor: 39.397