Investigator

Madhura R. Pandkar

Postdoctoral Research Associate · University of Tennessee at Knoxville, Biochemistry & Cellular and Molecular Biology

About

MRPMadhura R. Pandkar
Papers(1)
CRISPR screen reveals…
Collaborators(6)
Sophia M. LamperisZachary R. ChalmersC. Shad ThaxtonDaniela MateiJonathan S. RinkLeo I. Gordon
Institutions(1)
Northwestern Universi…

Papers

CRISPR screen reveals a simultaneous targeted mechanism to reduce cancer cell selenium and increase lipid oxidation to induce ferroptosis

Ferroptosis is a cell death mechanism distinguished by its dependence on iron-mediated lipid oxidation. Cancer cells highly resistant to conventional therapies often demonstrate lipid metabolic and redox vulnerabilities that sensitize them to cell death by ferroptosis. These include a unique dependency on the lipid antioxidant selenoenzyme, glutathione peroxidase 4 (GPx4), that acts as a ferroptosis inhibitor. Synthetic high-density lipoprotein-like nanoparticle (HDL NP) targets the high-affinity HDL receptor scavenger receptor class B type 1 (SR-B1) and regulates cell and cell membrane lipid metabolism. Recently, we reported that targeting cancer cell SR-B1 with HDL NP depleted cell GPx4, which is accompanied by increased cell membrane lipid peroxidation and cancer cell death. These data suggest that HDL NP may induce ferroptosis. Thus, we conducted an unbiased CRISPR-based positive selection screen and target validation studies in ovarian clear cell carcinoma (OCCC) cell lines to ascertain the mechanism through which HDL NP regulates GPx4 and kills cancer cells. The screen revealed two genes, acyl-CoA synthetase long chain family member 4 (ACSL4) and thioredoxin reductase 1 (TXNRD1), whose loss conferred resistance to HDL NP. Validation of ACSL4 supports that HDL NP induces ferroptosis as the predominant mechanism of cell death, while validation of TXNRD1 revealed that HDL NP reduces cellular selenium and selenoprotein production, most notably, GPx4. Accordingly, we define cancer cell metabolic targets that can be simultaneously actuated by a multifunctional, synthetic HDL NP ligand of SR-B1 to kill cancer cells by ferroptosis.

9Works
1Papers
6Collaborators
FerroptosisCell Line, TumorOvarian Neoplasms

Positions

2025–

Postdoctoral Research Associate

University of Tennessee at Knoxville · Biochemistry & Cellular and Molecular Biology

2023–

Postdoctoral Scholar

Northwestern University · Medicine

Education

2023

Doctor of Philosophy

Indian Institute of Science Education and Research, Bhopal · Biological Sciences

2014

Bachelors in Microbiology

Shardabai Pawar Mahila Arts, Commerce & Science College · Microbiology

Country

IN

Keywords
Cancer researchHypoxiaMetabolismEpigeneticsGene RegulationRedox Epigenetics