Abstract
Glioblastoma (GBM) is characterized by hypoxia-driven metabolic adaptation and profound therapeutic resistance. Ferroptosis, an iron-dependent lipid peroxidation-related cell death process, has emerged as a potential vulnerability; however, its relationship with hypoxia signaling remains incompletely defined. In this study, we performed integrative transcriptomic and single-cell RNA sequencing analyses to investigate the relationship between hypoxia signaling and ferroptosis-related gene signatures in GBM. Intersection analysis of hypoxia-associated differentially expressed genes and curated ferroptosis-related gene sets identified 29 core candidate genes. FerroScore stratification revealed that tumors with higher ferroptosis-related transcriptional signatures were significantly associated with poor overall survival. Among these genes, HILPDA emerged as a hypoxia-associated gene consistently linked to ferroptosis-related gene expression patterns and immune-related transcriptional programs. HILPDA expression showed significant correlations with iron-ROS axis components, including HMOX1, NOX4, and STEAP3, and was associated with immune microenvironment changes characterized by T cell depletion and inflammatory infiltration. Single-cell RNA-seq analysis further supported the cellular-level association between HILPDA expression and hypoxia-related transcriptional states. Structural equation modeling suggested that the relationship between HILPDA expression and ferroptosis-related gene signatures may be mediated through hypoxia-related pathways. Collectively, these findings indicate a transcriptomic association between hypoxia signaling and ferroptosis-related gene signatures in GBM and identify HILPDA as a candidate gene associated with this axis.