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Photoinduction of Ferroptosis and cGAS-STING Activation by a H 2 S-Responsive Iridium(III) Complex for Cancer-Specific Therapy.

Yi LiBen LiuYue ZhengMeng HuLiu-Yi LiuCai-Rong LiWei ZhangYu-Xiao LaiZong-Wan Mao
Published in: Journal of medicinal chemistry (2024)
Triggering ferroptosis represents a promising anticancer therapeutic strategy, but the development of a selective ferroptosis inducer for cancer-specific therapy remains a great challenge. Herein, a H 2 S-responsive iridium(III) complex NA-Ir has been well-designed as a ferroptosis inducer. NA-Ir could selectively light up H 2 S-rich cancer cells, primarily localize in mitochondria, intercalate into mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA), and induce mtDNA damage, exhibiting higher anticancer activity under light irradiation. Mechanistic studies showed that NA-Ir -mediated PDT triggered lipid peroxidation and glutathione peroxidase 4 downregulation through ROS production and GSH depletion, resulting in ferroptosis through multiple pathways. Moreover, the intense mtDNA damage can activate the cyclic GMP-AMP synthase-stimulator of the interferon gene (cGAS-STING) pathway, leading to ferritinophagy and further ferroptosis. RNA-sequencing analysis showed that NA-Ir -mediated PDT mainly affects the expression of genes related to ferroptosis, autophagy, and cancer immunity. This study demonstrates the first cancer-specific example with ferroptosis and cGAS-STING activation, which provides a new strategy for multimodal synergistic therapy.
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