Ferroptosis recently gained considerable attention in breast cancer research, particularly in triple-negative subtypes. In this context, emerging evidence links transglutaminase 2 (TG2) to aggressive tumour phenotypes, highlighting pharmacological TG2 inhibition as a promising therapeutic approach in aggressive breast cancer settings. Comparative analysis of independent RNA-sequencing datasets from distinct cellular models treated with irreversible TG2 inhibitors revealed ferroptosis as the only significantly enriched and commonly deregulated process. In triple-negative breast cancer cells, treatment with the cell-permeable AA9 inhibitor triggered a coherent ferroptotic transcriptional program, characterized by downregulation of glutathione peroxidase 4 and the glutathione biosynthesis genes and by upregulation of stress-responsive and iron-handling factors. A covalent pull-down magnetic system combined with proteomics and bioinformatic target prediction identified TG2 as the primary intracellular target of AA9 and revealed a TG2-centered interactome involving, among the pathways, hypoxia signalling, cytoskeletal regulation, and apoptosis. Moreover, molecular docking and immunoprecipitation experiments demonstrated that TG2 is physically associated with BH3-interacting domain death agonist and Bcl-2-associated X protein, key mediators of ferroptosis and apoptosis. Transmission electron microscopy further confirmed that AA9 induced ferroptosis-associated mitochondrial alterations, prevented by ferrostatin-1 co-treatment. Overall, these findings confirm TG2 pharmacological targeting as a strategy to reprogram metabolic adaptation and cell death responses in aggressive tumour subtypes.

Diving into AA9-mediated transglutaminase 2 inhibition reveals ferroptosis as driver of anticancer effects

Ancona, Pietro;Grassilli, Silvia;Zuccato, Cristina;Brenna, Cinzia;Barboni, Davide;Cavazzini, Alberto;Catani, Martina;Bertagnolo, Valeria;Bergamini, Carlo M;Bianchi, Nicoletta
;
Neri, Luca M
2026

Abstract

Ferroptosis recently gained considerable attention in breast cancer research, particularly in triple-negative subtypes. In this context, emerging evidence links transglutaminase 2 (TG2) to aggressive tumour phenotypes, highlighting pharmacological TG2 inhibition as a promising therapeutic approach in aggressive breast cancer settings. Comparative analysis of independent RNA-sequencing datasets from distinct cellular models treated with irreversible TG2 inhibitors revealed ferroptosis as the only significantly enriched and commonly deregulated process. In triple-negative breast cancer cells, treatment with the cell-permeable AA9 inhibitor triggered a coherent ferroptotic transcriptional program, characterized by downregulation of glutathione peroxidase 4 and the glutathione biosynthesis genes and by upregulation of stress-responsive and iron-handling factors. A covalent pull-down magnetic system combined with proteomics and bioinformatic target prediction identified TG2 as the primary intracellular target of AA9 and revealed a TG2-centered interactome involving, among the pathways, hypoxia signalling, cytoskeletal regulation, and apoptosis. Moreover, molecular docking and immunoprecipitation experiments demonstrated that TG2 is physically associated with BH3-interacting domain death agonist and Bcl-2-associated X protein, key mediators of ferroptosis and apoptosis. Transmission electron microscopy further confirmed that AA9 induced ferroptosis-associated mitochondrial alterations, prevented by ferrostatin-1 co-treatment. Overall, these findings confirm TG2 pharmacological targeting as a strategy to reprogram metabolic adaptation and cell death responses in aggressive tumour subtypes.
2026
Ancona, Pietro; Grassilli, Silvia; Zuccato, Cristina; Brenna, Cinzia; Barboni, Davide; Cavazzini, Alberto; Catani, Martina; Bertagnolo, Valeria; Naval...espandi
File in questo prodotto:
Non ci sono file associati a questo prodotto.

I documenti in SFERA sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11392/2630490
 Attenzione

Attenzione! I dati visualizzati non sono stati sottoposti a validazione da parte dell'ateneo

Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? ND
  • Scopus 0
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? 0
social impact