Litcius/Paper detail

AKT1 participates in ferroptosis vulnerability by driving autophagic degradation of FTH1 in cisplatin-resistant ovarian cancer

Zhikun Shi, Hao Yuan, Lanqing Cao, Yang Lin

2023Biochemistry and Cell Biology16 citationsDOI

Abstract

Resistance to cisplatin (DDP)-based chemotherapy is an important reason for the failure of ovarian cancer treatment. However, tumor cells resistant to chemotherapy may expose vulnerability to other cell death pathways. Here, we found that DDP-resistant ovarian cancer cells are more susceptible to erastin-induced ferroptosis. It should be noted that this vulnerability does not depend on the weakening of classical ferroptosis defense proteins, but is caused by the reduction of ferritin heavy chain (FTH1). DDP-resistant ovarian cancer cells maintain a high level of autophagy to escape the pressure of chemotherapy, which ultimately leads to increased autophagic degradation of FTH1. We further revealed that the loss of AKT1 was the reason for the increased autophagy level of DDP-resistant ovarian cancer cells. Our study provides new insights into reversing DDP resistance in ovarian cancer by targeting ferroptosis pathway, and AKT1 may be a molecular marker of susceptibility to ferroptosis.

Topics & Concepts

Ovarian cancerAutophagyCisplatinCancer researchProgrammed cell deathChemotherapyCancer cellCancerBiologyApoptosisBiochemistryGeneticsFerroptosis and cancer prognosisRNA modifications and cancerEpigenetics and DNA Methylation