Molecular Cancer (Sep 2024)

RNA m6A modification in ferroptosis: implications for advancing tumor immunotherapy

  • Jun-xiao Shi,
  • Zhi-chao Zhang,
  • Hao-zan Yin,
  • Xian-jie Piao,
  • Cheng-hu Liu,
  • Qian-jia Liu,
  • Jia-cheng Zhang,
  • Wen-xuan Zhou,
  • Fu-chen Liu,
  • Fu Yang,
  • Yue-fan Wang,
  • Hui Liu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12943-024-02132-6
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 23, no. 1
pp. 1 – 39

Abstract

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Abstract The pursuit of innovative therapeutic strategies in oncology remains imperative, given the persistent global impact of cancer as a leading cause of mortality. Immunotherapy is regarded as one of the most promising techniques for systemic cancer therapies among the several therapeutic options available. Nevertheless, limited immune response rates and immune resistance urge us on an augmentation for therapeutic efficacy rather than sticking to conventional approaches. Ferroptosis, a novel reprogrammed cell death, is tightly correlated with the tumor immune environment and interferes with cancer progression. Highly mutant or metastasis-prone tumor cells are more susceptible to iron-dependent nonapoptotic cell death. Consequently, ferroptosis-induction therapies hold the promise of overcoming resistance to conventional treatments. The most prevalent post-transcriptional modification, RNA m6A modification, regulates the metabolic processes of targeted RNAs and is involved in numerous physiological and pathological processes. Aberrant m6A modification influences cell susceptibility to ferroptosis, as well as the expression of immune checkpoints. Clarifying the regulation of m6A modification on ferroptosis and its significance in tumor cell response will provide a distinct method for finding potential targets to enhance the effectiveness of immunotherapy. In this review, we comprehensively summarized regulatory characteristics of RNA m6A modification on ferroptosis and discussed the role of RNA m6A-mediated ferroptosis on immunotherapy, aiming to enhance the effectiveness of ferroptosis-sensitive immunotherapy as a treatment for immune-resistant malignancies.