Activation of lysosomal iron triggers ferroptosis in cancer

Raphaël Rodriguez, Tatiana Cañeque, Leeroy Baron, Sebastian Müller, Alanis Carmona, Ludovic Colombeau, Antoine Versini, Marie Sabatier, Julio Sampaio, Eikan Mishima, Armel Picard-Bernes, Stéphanie Solier, Jiashuo Zheng, Bettina Proneth, Leishemba Thoidingjam, Christine Gaillet, Laurence Grimaud, Cameron Fraser, Krystina Szylo, Caroline Bonnet, Emmanuelle Charafe, Christophe Ginestier, Patricia Santofimia, Nelson Dusetti, Juan Iovanna, Antonio Sa Cunha, Gabriella Pittau, Pascal Hammel, Dimitri Tzanis, Sylvie Bonvalot, Sarah Watson, Brent Stockwell, Marcus Conrad, Jessalyn Ubellacker
Abstract

Abstract
Iron catalyses the oxidation of lipids in biological membranes and promotes a form of cell death referred to as ferroptosis1-3. Identifying where this chemistry takes place in the cell can inform the design of drugs capable of inducing or inhibiting ferroptosis in various disease-relevant settings. Whereas genetic approaches have revealed underlying mechanisms of lipid peroxide detoxification1,4,5, small molecules can provide unparalleled spatiotemporal control of the chemistry at work6. Here, we show that the ferroptosis inhibitor liproxstatin-1 (Lip-1) exerts a protective activity by inactivating iron in lysosomes. Based on this, we designed the bifunctional compound fentomycin that targets phospholipids at the plasma membrane and activates iron in lysosomes upon endocytosis, promoting oxidative degradation of phospholipids and ferroptosis. Fentomycin effectively kills primary sarcoma and pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma cells. It acts as a lipolysis-targeting chimera (LIPTAC), preferentially targeting iron-rich CD44high cell-subpopulations7,8 associated with the metastatic disease and drug resistance9,10. Furthermore, we demonstrate that fentomycin also depletes CD44high cells in vivo and reduces intranodal tumour growth in an immunocompetent murine model of breast cancer metastasis. These data demonstrate that lysosomal iron triggers ferroptosis and that lysosomal iron redox chemistry can be exploited for therapeutic benefits.