Laboratory of Innate Immunity and Cell Death Publication

PUBLICATION

Ferroptosis-activating metabolite acrolein antagonizes necroptosis and anti-cancer therapeutics
Author
Hyun Bae#, Seonghyun Moon#, Mengmeng Chang, Fenfen Zhang, Yeonseo Jang, Wonyoung Kim, Soyeon Kim, Minjie Fu, Jaemin Lim, Seongjun Park, Chirag N Patel, Raghvendra Mall, Min Zheng, Si Ming Man*, Rajendra Karki*
Journal
Nature Communications
Status
2025 May
Vol
16(1)
Page
4919
Year
2025
File
84_2025_Ferroptosis-activating metabolite acrolein antagonizes necroptosis and anti-cancer therapeutics.pdf (4.2M) 25회 다운로드 DATE : 2025-05-29 11:41:56

# Hyun Bae and Seonghyun Moon contributed equally to this study.


Abstract : 

Dysregulated cell death leading to uncontrolled cell proliferation is a hallmark of cancer. Chemotherapy-induced cell death is critical for the success of cancer treatment but this process is impaired by metabolic byproducts. How these byproducts interfere with anti-cancer therapy is unclear. Here, we show that the metabolic byproduct acrolein derived from polyamines, tobacco smoke or fuel combustion, induces ferroptosis independently of ZBP1, while suppressing necroptosis in cancer cells by inhibiting the oligomerization of the necroptosis effector MLKL. Loss of the enzyme SAT1, which contributes to intracellular acrolein production, sensitizes cells to necroptosis. In mice, administration of an acrolein-trapping agent relieves necroptosis blockade and enhances the anti-tumor efficacy of the chemotherapeutic drug cyclophosphamide. Human patients with cancer coupled with a higher cell death activity but a lower expression of genes controlling polyamine metabolism exhibit improved survival. These findings highlight that the removal of metabolic byproducts improves the success of certain chemotherapies.


© 2025. The Author(s).