Roy Ishan, McAllister Donna M, Gorse Egal, Dixon Kate, Piper Clinton T, Zimmerman Noah P, Getschman Anthony E, Tsai Susan, Engle Dannielle D, Evans Douglas B, Volkman Brian F, Kalyanaraman Balaraman, Dwinell Michael B
Department of Microbiology & Molecular Genetics, Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
Department of Microbiology & Molecular Genetics, Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Department of Biophysics, Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
Cancer Res. 2015 Sep 1;75(17):3529-42. doi: 10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-14-2645.
Patients with pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) invariably succumb to metastatic disease, but the underlying mechanisms that regulate PDAC cell movement and metastasis remain little understood. In this study, we investigated the effects of the chemokine gene CXCL12, which is silenced in PDAC tumors, yet is sufficient to suppress growth and metastasis when re-expressed. Chemokines like CXCL12 regulate cell movement in a biphasic pattern, with peak migration typically in the low nanomolar concentration range. Herein, we tested the hypothesis that the biphasic cell migration pattern induced by CXCL12 reflected a biased agonist bioenergetic signaling that might be exploited to interfere with PDAC metastasis. In human and murine PDAC cell models, we observed that nonmigratory doses of CXCL12 were sufficient to decrease oxidative phosphorylation and glycolytic capacity and to increase levels of phosphorylated forms of the master metabolic kinase AMPK. Those same doses of CXCL12 locked myosin light chain into a phosphorylated state, thereby decreasing F-actin polymerization and preventing cell migration in a manner dependent upon AMPK and the calcium-dependent kinase CAMKII. Notably, at elevated concentrations of CXCL12 that were insufficient to trigger chemotaxis of PDAC cells, AMPK blockade resulted in increased cell movement. In two preclinical mouse models of PDAC, administration of CXCL12 decreased tumor dissemination, supporting our hypothesis that chemokine-biased agonist signaling may offer a useful therapeutic strategy. Our results offer a mechanistic rationale for further investigation of CXCL12 as a potential therapy to prevent or treat PDAC metastasis.
胰腺导管腺癌(PDAC)患者最终都会死于转移性疾病,但调节PDAC细胞移动和转移的潜在机制仍知之甚少。在本研究中,我们调查了趋化因子基因CXCL12的作用,该基因在PDAC肿瘤中沉默,但重新表达时足以抑制肿瘤生长和转移。像CXCL12这样的趋化因子以双相模式调节细胞移动,典型的峰值迁移出现在低纳摩尔浓度范围内。在此,我们测试了这样一个假设,即CXCL12诱导的双相细胞迁移模式反映了一种有偏向性的激动剂生物能量信号,这可能被用于干扰PDAC转移。在人和小鼠的PDAC细胞模型中,我们观察到非迁移剂量的CXCL12足以降低氧化磷酸化和糖酵解能力,并增加主要代谢激酶AMPK的磷酸化形式水平。相同剂量的CXCL12使肌球蛋白轻链锁定在磷酸化状态,从而减少F-肌动蛋白聚合,并以依赖于AMPK和钙依赖性激酶CAMKII的方式阻止细胞迁移。值得注意的是,在不足以触发PDAC细胞趋化性的高浓度CXCL12下,AMPK阻断导致细胞移动增加。在两个PDAC临床前小鼠模型中,给予CXCL12可减少肿瘤播散,支持了我们的假设,即趋化因子偏向性激动剂信号可能提供一种有用的治疗策略。我们的结果为进一步研究CXCL12作为预防或治疗PDAC转移的潜在疗法提供了机制依据。