Ferroptosis susceptibility of melanoma cells: dependence on cell-type, acquired drug resistance, and medium composition

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Abstract

Resistance of melanoma cells to targeted therapy (BRAF and MEK inhibitors) is a major clinical problem and alternative treatments are sought. We describe the establishment of modular physiologic medium (MPM) and Mel-MPM (which contains additional supplements and sustains the 3D growth of melanoma cells, fibroblasts (NHDFs) and HMEC-1 endothelial cells) as novel resources for melanoma and combine them with a multi-cell-type matrix-embedded 3D culture model to investigate melanoma cell vulnerabilities in a more physiological setting.

We made use of the modular nature of MPM to interrogate NEAA dependencies in melanoma cells and we found them to be particularly sensitive to the depletion of C/C. We additionally describe that melanoma cells are less sensitive to ferroptosis inducing compounds when cultured in MPM compared to RPMI and we could attribute this to different components of MPM and Mel-MPM (selenite, B27). Cell death induced by the glutathione peroxidase 4 inhibitor, ML162, had characteristics of ferroptosis or apoptosis depending on cell type, its drug resistance status and the culture medium. Cystine/cysteine starvation and ML162 treatment combinations increased melanoma cell death in 2D, 3D, and also in the complex matrix embedded multi-cell-type-3D system in Organoplates TM . This underlines the potential of combining metabolism-oriented drug treatments with amino acid starvation conditions, which is of interest in view of future therapeutic approaches to combat melanoma and other cancer types.

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