Signal Transduction and Targeted Therapy (Mar 2023)

Exosomes secreted from cardiomyocytes suppress the sensitivity of tumor ferroptosis in ischemic heart failure

  • Ye Yuan,
  • Zhongting Mei,
  • Zhezhe Qu,
  • Guanghui Li,
  • Shuting Yu,
  • Yingqi Liu,
  • Kuiwu Liu,
  • Zhihua Shen,
  • Jiaying Pu,
  • Yanquan Wang,
  • Changhao Wang,
  • Zhiyong Sun,
  • Qian Liu,
  • Xiaochen Pang,
  • Ao Wang,
  • Zijing Ren,
  • Tong Wang,
  • Ying Liu,
  • Jinhuan Hong,
  • Jiajie Xie,
  • Xin Li,
  • Zhonghua Wang,
  • Weijie Du,
  • Baofeng Yang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41392-023-01336-4
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 1
pp. 1 – 15

Abstract

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Abstract Heart failure (HF) patients in general have a higher risk of developing cancer. Several animal studies have indicated that cardiac remodeling and HF remarkably accelerate tumor progression, highlighting a cause-and-effect relationship between these two disease entities. Targeting ferroptosis, a prevailing form of non-apoptotic cell death, has been considered a promising therapeutic strategy for human cancers. Exosomes critically contribute to proximal and distant organ-organ communications and play crucial roles in regulating diseases in a paracrine manner. However, whether exosomes control the sensitivity of cancer to ferroptosis via regulating the cardiomyocyte-tumor cell crosstalk in ischemic HF has not yet been explored. Here, we demonstrate that myocardial infarction (MI) decreased the sensitivity of cancer cells to the canonical ferroptosis activator erastin or imidazole ketone erastin in a mouse model of xenograft tumor. Post-MI plasma exosomes potently blunted the sensitivity of tumor cells to ferroptosis inducers both in vitro in mouse Lewis lung carcinoma cell line LLC and osteosarcoma cell line K7M2 and in vivo with xenograft tumorigenesis model. The expression of miR-22-3p in cardiomyocytes and plasma-exosomes was significantly upregulated in the failing hearts of mice with chronic MI and of HF patients as well. Incubation of tumor cells with the exosomes isolated from post-MI mouse plasma or overexpression of miR-22-3p alone abrogated erastin-induced ferroptotic cell death in vitro. Cardiomyocyte-enriched miR-22-3p was packaged in exosomes and transferred into tumor cells. Inhibition of cardiomyocyte-specific miR-22-3p by AAV9 sponge increased the sensitivity of cancer cells to ferroptosis. ACSL4, a pro-ferroptotic gene, was experimentally established as a target of miR-22-3p in tumor cells. Taken together, our findings uncovered for the first time that MI suppresses erastin-induced ferroptosis through releasing miR-22-3p-enriched exosomes derived from cardiomyocytes. Therefore, targeting exosome-mediated cardiomyocyte/tumor pathological communication may offer a novel approach for the ferroptosis-based antitumor therapy.