Roy Ishan, Zimmerman Noah P, Mackinnon A Craig, Tsai Susan, Evans Douglas B, Dwinell Michael B
Department of Microbiology and Molecular Genetics, Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, United States of America.
Department of Pathology, Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2014 Mar 4;9(3):e90400. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0090400. eCollection 2014.
Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma is an unsolved health problem with nearly 75% of patients diagnosed with advanced disease and an overall 5-year survival rate near 5%. Despite the strong link between mortality and malignancy, the mechanisms behind pancreatic cancer dissemination and metastasis are poorly understood. Correlative pathological and cell culture analyses suggest the chemokine receptor CXCR4 plays a biological role in pancreatic cancer progression. In vivo roles for the CXCR4 ligand CXCL12 in pancreatic cancer malignancy were investigated. CXCR4 and CXCR7 were consistently expressed in normal and cancerous pancreatic ductal epithelium, established cell lines, and patient-derived primary cancer cells. Relative to healthy exocrine ducts, CXCL12 expression was pathologically repressed in pancreatic cancer tissue specimens and patient-derived cell lines. To test the functional consequences of CXCL12 silencing, pancreatic cancer cell lines stably expressingthe chemokine were engineered. Consistent with a role for CXCL12 as a tumor suppressor, cells producing the chemokine wereincreasingly adherent and migration deficient in vitro and poorly metastatic in vivo, compared to control cells. Further, CXCL12 reintroduction significantly reduced tumor growth in vitro, with significantly smaller tumors in vivo, leading to a pronounced survival advantage in a preclinical model. Together, these data demonstrate a functional tumor suppressive role for the normal expression of CXCL12 in pancreatic ducts, regulating both tumor growth andcellulardissemination to metastatic sites.
胰腺导管腺癌是一个尚未解决的健康问题,近75%的患者被诊断为晚期疾病,总体5年生存率接近5%。尽管死亡率与恶性肿瘤之间存在紧密联系,但胰腺癌扩散和转移背后的机制仍知之甚少。相关的病理和细胞培养分析表明,趋化因子受体CXCR4在胰腺癌进展中发挥生物学作用。研究了CXCR4配体CXCL12在胰腺癌恶性肿瘤中的体内作用。CXCR4和CXCR7在正常和癌性胰腺导管上皮、已建立的细胞系以及患者来源的原发性癌细胞中持续表达。相对于健康的外分泌导管,CXCL12在胰腺癌组织标本和患者来源的细胞系中表达受到病理抑制。为了测试CXCL12沉默的功能后果,构建了稳定表达趋化因子的胰腺癌细胞系。与CXCL12作为肿瘤抑制因子的作用一致,与对照细胞相比,产生趋化因子的细胞在体外黏附性增加且迁移能力缺陷,在体内转移能力较差。此外,重新引入CXCL12显著降低了体外肿瘤生长,体内肿瘤明显更小,在临床前模型中带来了显著的生存优势。总之,这些数据证明了胰腺导管中CXCL12正常表达的功能性肿瘤抑制作用,调节肿瘤生长和细胞向转移部位的扩散。