AI Article Synopsis

  • Sorafenib is the primary treatment for advanced hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), but the study shows that using the iron chelator deferoxamine protects HCC cells from its harmful effects by depleting intracellular iron stores.
  • The protective mechanism does not interfere with traditional programmed cell death paths like apoptosis, nor does it stop sorafenib from targeting kinases; rather, it reduces oxidative stress in the cells.
  • The research suggests that sorafenib may induce a type of cell death similar to ferroptosis, as its cytotoxic effects can be blocked by inhibitors associated with ferroptosis, highlighting the potential of targeting this pathway for better HCC treatments.

Article Abstract

The multikinase inhibitor sorafenib is currently the treatment of reference for advanced hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). In our report, we examined the cytotoxic effects of sorafenib on HCC cells. We report that the depletion of the intracellular iron stores achieved by using the iron chelator deferoxamine (DFX) strikingly protects HCC cells from the cytotoxic effects of sorafenib. The protective effect of the depletion of intracellular iron stores could not be explained by an interference with conventional forms of programmed cell death, such as apoptosis or autophagic cell death. We also found that DFX did not prevent sorafenib from reaching its intracellular target kinases. Instead, the depletion of intracellular iron stores prevented sorafenib from inducing oxidative stress in HCC cells. We examined the possibility that sorafenib might exert a cytotoxic effect that resembles ferroptosis, a form of cell death in which iron-dependent oxidative mechanisms play a pivotal role. In agreement with this possibility, we found that pharmacological inhibitors (ferrostatin-1) and genetic procedures (RNA interference against IREB-2) previously reported to modulate ferroptosis, readily block the cytotoxic effects of sorafenib in HCC cells. Collectively, our findings identify ferroptosis as an effective mechanism for the induction of cell death in HCC. Ferroptosis could potentially become a goal for the medical treatment of HCC, thus opening new avenues for the optimization of the use of sorafenib in these tumors.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ijc.28159DOI Listing

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