Investigator

Hui-Hsuan Kuo

Northwestern University - Chicago

HKHui-Hsuan Kuo
Papers(1)
Iron Chelation Therap…
Collaborators(10)
Jenna E. MoyerJuan R. Cubillos-RuizJyothi ManoharKevin HolcombKihwan KimLasse SuominenLorenzo GalluzziMaria A. SierraMatías Marín FalcoMelissa K. Frey
Institutions(3)
Weill Cornell MedicineUniversity Of HelsinkiNew York Medical Coll…

Papers

Iron Chelation Therapy Elicits Innate Immune Control of Metastatic Ovarian Cancer

Abstract Iron accumulation in tumors contributes to disease progression and chemoresistance. Although targeting this process can influence various hallmarks of cancer, the immunomodulatory effects of iron chelation in the tumor microenvironment are unknown. Here, we report that treatment with deferiprone, an FDA-approved iron chelator, unleashes innate immune responses that restrain ovarian cancer. Deferiprone reprogrammed ovarian cancer cells toward an immunostimulatory state characterized by the production of type-I IFN and overexpression of molecules that activate NK cells. Mechanistically, these effects were driven by innate sensing of mitochondrial DNA in the cytosol and concomitant activation of nuclear DNA damage responses triggered upon iron chelation. Deferiprone synergized with chemotherapy and prolonged the survival of mice with ovarian cancer by bolstering type-I IFN responses that drove NK cell-dependent control of metastatic disease. Hence, iron chelation may represent an alternative immunotherapeutic strategy for malignancies that are refractory to current T-cell–centric modalities. Significance: This study uncovers that targeting dysregulated iron accumulation in ovarian tumors represents a major therapeutic opportunity. Iron chelation therapy using an FDA-approved agent causes immunogenic stress responses in ovarian cancer cells that delay metastatic disease progression and enhance the effects of first-line chemotherapy. See related commentary by Bell and Zou, p. 1771

9Works
1Papers
31Collaborators
Ovarian NeoplasmsCell Line, TumorNeoplasm MetastasisTumor MicroenvironmentDisease Models, AnimalApoptosis

Positions

2016–

Researcher

Northwestern University - Chicago

Education

2019

Weill Cornell Medicine · Pharmacology