Cell Death and Disease (Jul 2021)

Sorafenib fails to trigger ferroptosis across a wide range of cancer cell lines

  • Jiashuo Zheng,
  • Mami Sato,
  • Eikan Mishima,
  • Hideyo Sato,
  • Bettina Proneth,
  • Marcus Conrad

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41419-021-03998-w
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 7
pp. 1 – 10

Abstract

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Abstract Sorafenib, a protein kinase inhibitor approved for the treatment of hepatocellular carcinoma and advanced renal cell carcinoma, has been repeatedly reported to induce ferroptosis by possibly involving inhibition of the cystine/glutamate antiporter, known as system xc −. Using a combination of well-defined genetically engineered tumor cell lines and canonical small molecule ferroptosis inhibitors, we now provide unequivocal evidence that sorafenib does not induce ferroptosis in a series of tumor cell lines unlike the cognate system xc − inhibitors sulfasalazine and erastin. We further show that only a subset of tumor cells dies by ferroptosis upon sulfasalazine and erastin treatment, implying that certain cell lines appear to be resistant to system xc − inhibition, while others undergo ferroptosis-independent cell death. From these findings, we conclude that sorafenib does not qualify as a bona fide ferroptosis inducer and that ferroptosis induced by system xc − inhibitors can only be achieved in a fraction of tumor cell lines despite robust expression of SLC7A11, the substrate-specific subunit of system xc −.