Cell Death and Disease (Jun 2024)

Targeting LINC00152 activates cAMP/Ca2+/ferroptosis axis and overcomes tamoxifen resistance in ER+ breast cancer

  • Ozge Saatci,
  • Rashedul Alam,
  • Kim-Tuyen Huynh-Dam,
  • Aynur Isik,
  • Meral Uner,
  • Nevin Belder,
  • Pelin Gulizar Ersan,
  • Unal Metin Tokat,
  • Burge Ulukan,
  • Metin Cetin,
  • Kubra Calisir,
  • Mustafa Emre Gedik,
  • Hilal Bal,
  • Ozlem Sener Sahin,
  • Yasser Riazalhosseini,
  • Denis Thieffry,
  • Daniel Gautheret,
  • Besim Ogretmen,
  • Sercan Aksoy,
  • Aysegul Uner,
  • Aytekin Akyol,
  • Ozgur Sahin

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41419-024-06814-3
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 6
pp. 1 – 14

Abstract

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Abstract Tamoxifen has been the mainstay therapy to treat early, locally advanced, and metastatic estrogen receptor-positive (ER + ) breast cancer, constituting around 75% of all cases. However, the emergence of resistance is common, necessitating the identification of novel therapeutic targets. Here, we demonstrated that long-noncoding RNA LINC00152 confers tamoxifen resistance by blocking tamoxifen-induced ferroptosis, an iron-mediated cell death. Mechanistically, inhibiting LINC00152 reduces the mRNA stability of phosphodiesterase 4D (PDE4D), leading to activation of the cAMP/PKA/CREB axis and increased expression of the TRPC1 Ca2+ channel. This causes cytosolic Ca2+ overload and generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) that is, on the one hand, accompanied by downregulation of FTH1, a member of the iron sequestration unit, thus increasing intracellular Fe2+ levels; and on the other hand, inhibition of the peroxidase activity upon reduced GPX4 and xCT levels, in part by cAMP/CREB. These ultimately restore tamoxifen-dependent lipid peroxidation and ferroptotic cell death which are reversed upon chelating Ca2+ or overexpressing GPX4 or xCT. Overexpressing PDE4D reverses LINC00152 inhibition-mediated tamoxifen sensitization by de-activating the cAMP/Ca2+/ferroptosis axis. Importantly, high LINC00152 expression is significantly correlated with high PDE4D/low ferroptosis and worse survival in multiple cohorts of tamoxifen- or tamoxifen-containing endocrine therapy-treated ER+ breast cancer patients. Overall, we identified LINC00152 inhibition as a novel mechanism of tamoxifen sensitization via restoring tamoxifen-dependent ferroptosis upon destabilizing PDE4D, increasing cAMP and Ca2+ levels, thus leading to ROS generation and lipid peroxidation. Our findings reveal LINC00152 and its effectors as actionable therapeutic targets to improve clinical outcome in refractory ER+ breast cancer.