Validation of ferroptosis in canine cancer cells to enable comparative oncology and translational medicine.
Priya ChatterjiGang XingLaura FurstKrishna DaveQiong ZhouDaniel V LaBarberaDouglas H ThammJohn K EatonMathias J WawerVasanthi S ViswanathanPublished in: bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology (2024)
Ferroptosis is a cell death mechanism that has attracted significant attention as a potential basis for the development of new cancer therapies. Validation of ferroptosis biology in species commonly used in translation and pre-clinical development is a necessary foundation for enabling the advancement of such ferroptosis modulating drugs. Here, we demonstrate that canine cancer cells exhibit sensitivity to a wide range of ferroptosis-inducing perturbations in a manner indistinguishable from human cancer cells, and recapitulate characteristic patterns of ferroptotic response across tumor types seen in the human setting. The foundation provided herein establishes the dog as a relevant efficacy and toxicology model for ferroptosis and creates new opportunities to leverage the canine comparative oncology paradigm to accelerate the development of ferroptosis-inducing drugs for human cancer patients.