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Phospholipid peroxidation in macrophage confers tumor resistance by suppressing phagocytic capability towards ferroptotic cells.

Xiang LuoHai-Biao GongZi-Chun LiDong-Dong LiZi-Xuan LiJie SunChang-Yu YanRui-Ting HuangYue FengShu-Rui ChenYun-Feng CaoMingxian LiuRong WangFeng HuangWan-Yang SunHiroshi KuriharaWen-Jun DuanLei LiangWen JinYan-Ping WuRong-Rong HeYi-Fang Li
Published in: Cell death and differentiation (2024)
Ferroptosis holds significant potential for application in cancer therapy. However, ferroptosis inducers are not cell-specific and can cause phospholipid peroxidation in both tumor and non-tumor cells. This limitation greatly restricts the use of ferroptosis therapy as a safe and effective anticancer strategy. Our previous study demonstrated that macrophages can engulf ferroptotic cells through Toll-like receptor 2 (TLR2). Despite this advancement, the precise mechanism by which phospholipid peroxidation in macrophages affects their phagocytotic capability during treatment of tumors with ferroptotic agents is still unknown. Here, we utilized flow sorting combined with redox phospholipidomics to determine that phospholipid peroxidation in tumor microenvironment (TME) macrophages impaired the macrophages ability to eliminate ferroptotic tumor cells by phagocytosis, ultimately fostering tumor resistance to ferroptosis therapy. Mechanistically, the accumulation of phospholipid peroxidation in the macrophage endoplasmic reticulum (ER) repressed TLR2 trafficking to the plasma membrane and caused its retention in the ER by disrupting the interaction between TLR2 and its chaperone CNPY3. Subsequently, this ER-retained TLR2 recruited E3 ligase MARCH6 and initiated the proteasome-dependent degradation. Using redox phospholipidomics, we identified 1-steaoryl-2-15-HpETE-sn-glycero-3-phosphatidylethanolamine (SAPE-OOH) as the crucial mediator of these effects. Conclusively, our discovery elucidates a novel molecular mechanism underlying macrophage phospholipid peroxidation-induced tumor resistance to ferroptosis therapy and highlights the TLR2-MARCH6 axis as a potential therapeutic target for cancer therapy.
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