30 research outputs found

    Distinct populations of inflammatory fibroblasts and myofibroblasts in pancreatic cancer

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    Pancreatic stellate cells (PSCs) differentiate into cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs) that produce desmoplastic stroma, thereby modulating disease progression and therapeutic response in pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDA). However, it is unknown whether CAFs uniformly carry out these tasks or if subtypes of CAFs with distinct phenotypes in PDA exist. We identified a CAF subpopulation with elevated expression of alpha-smooth muscle actin (alphaSMA) located immediately adjacent to neoplastic cells in mouse and human PDA tissue. We recapitulated this finding in co-cultures of murine PSCs and PDA organoids, and demonstrated that organoid-activated CAFs produced desmoplastic stroma. The co-cultures showed cooperative interactions and revealed another distinct subpopulation of CAFs, located more distantly from neoplastic cells, which lacked elevated alphaSMA expression and instead secreted IL6 and additional inflammatory mediators. These findings were corroborated in mouse and human PDA tissue, providing direct evidence for CAF heterogeneity in PDA tumor biology with implications for disease etiology and therapeutic development

    Links between development and cancer : fetal mammary stem cells and human breast cancer

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    Parallels between stem cells, development and cancer have long been recognized, but few molecular links have been delineated. Here, we identify and characterize a population of fetal mammary stem cells (fMaSCs). fMaSC concentration peaked late in fetal development well after the emergence of the earliest mammary structures. Several characteristics of fMaSCs enabled more extensive purification than previously achieved using adult mammary. Single cells from the fMaSC-enriched population generated multi-lineage spheres. These cells also revealed properties often associated with cancers. For example, we observed cells co-expressing luminal, myoepithelial and mesenchymal markers. Gene expression profiling revealed significant similarities with archived breast cancer arrays. The ErbB Pathway was heavily represented and fMaSC derived spheres were sensitive to ErbB kinase inhibition. The fMaSC expression profile was associated with aggressive breast cancer subtypes and consisted of unique gene modules with relevance for prognosis and the potential to indicate new therapeutic targets. The parallels between development and cancer suggest that close relationships may exist between organ specific fetal stem cells and cancer. Here, we overcome the substantial technical challenges of such studies to identify, isolate and characterize fetal mammary stem cells (fMaSCs). We report the surprising finding that fMaSC activity is rare early and undergoes a significant increase late in fetal mammogenesis when the rudiments invade into the mesenchyme and fat pad. We find that regulatory pathways associated with fMaSCs are also differentially expressed in a subset of human breast cancers, suggesting that cancer cells may evolve to recapitulate the fetal stem cell state. Our characterization of the fetal mammary stem cell state provides a resource for generating new molecular hypotheses linking development and cancer, identifying candidate therapeutic targets, and developing new diagnostic and prognostic metric

    Altered glycosylation in pancreatic cancer and beyond.

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    Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDA) is one of the deadliest cancers and is projected to soon be the second leading cause of cancer death. Median survival of PDA patients is 6-10 mo, with the majority of diagnoses occurring at later, metastatic stages that are refractory to treatment and accompanied by worsening prognoses. Glycosylation is one of the most common types of post-translational modifications. The complex landscape of glycosylation produces an extensive repertoire of glycan moieties, glycoproteins, and glycolipids, thus adding a dynamic and tunable level of intra- and intercellular signaling regulation. Aberrant glycosylation is a feature of cancer progression and influences a broad range of signaling pathways to promote disease onset and progression. However, despite being so common, the functional consequences of altered glycosylation and their potential as therapeutic targets remain poorly understood and vastly understudied in the context of PDA. In this review, the functionality of glycans as they contribute to hallmarks of PDA are highlighted as active regulators of disease onset, tumor progression, metastatic capability, therapeutic resistance, and remodeling of the tumor immune microenvironment. A deeper understanding of the functional consequences of altered glycosylation will facilitate future hypothesis-driven studies and identify novel therapeutic strategies in PDA

    Model organoids provide new research opportunities for ductal pancreatic cancer

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    We recently established organoid models from normal and neoplastic murine and human pancreas tissues. These organoids exhibit ductal- and disease stage-specific characteristics and, after orthotopic transplantation, recapitulate the full spectrum of tumor progression. Pancreatic organoid technology provides a novel platform for the study of tumor biology and the discovery of potential biomarkers, therapeutics, and personalized medicine strategies

    P53 Mutations Change Phosphatidylinositol Acyl Chain Composition

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    Phosphatidylinositol phosphate (PIP) second messengers relay extracellular growth cues through the phosphorylation status of the inositol sugar, a signal transduction system that is deregulated in cancer. In stark contrast to PIP inositol head-group phosphorylation, changes in phosphatidylinositol (PI) lipid acyl chains in cancer have remained ill-defined. Here, we apply a mass-spectrometry-based method capable of unbiased high-throughput identification and quantification of cellular PI acyl chain composition. Using this approach, we find that PI lipid chains represent a cell-specific fingerprint and are unperturbed by serum-mediated signaling in contrast to the inositol head group. We find that mutation of Trp53 results in PIs containing reduced-length fatty acid moieties. Our results suggest that the anchoring tails of lipid second messengers form an additional layer of PIP signaling in cancer that operates independently of PTEN/PI3-kinase activity but is instead linked to p53

    Macrophage-derived granulin drives resistance to immune checkpoint inhibition in metastatic pancreatic cancer

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    The ability of disseminated cancer cells to evade the immune response is a critical step for efficient metastatic progression. Protection against an immune attack is often provided by the tumor microenvironment that suppresses and excludes cytotoxic CD8+ T cells. Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) is a highly aggressive metastatic disease with unmet needs, yet the immunoprotective role of the metastatic tumor microenvironment in pancreatic cancer is not completely understood. In this study we find that macrophage-derived granulin contributes to cytotoxic CD8+ T cell exclusion in metastatic livers. Granulin expression by macrophages was induced in response to colony-stimulating factor-1. Genetic depletion of granulin reduced the formation of a fibrotic stroma, thereby allowing T cell entry at the metastatic site. While metastatic PDAC tumors are largely resistant to anti-PD-1 therapy, blockade of PD-1 in granulin-depleted tumors restored the anti-tumor immune defense and dramatically decreased metastatic tumor burden. These findings suggest that targeting granulin may serve as a potential therapeutic strategy to restore CD8+ T cell infiltration in metastatic PDAC, thereby converting PDAC metastatic tumors, which are refractory to immune checkpoint inhibitors, into tumors that respond to immune checkpoint inhibition therapies

    Fine-tuning p53 activity through C-terminal modification significantly contributes to HSC homeostasis and mouse radiosensitivity

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    Cell cycle regulation in hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) is tightly controlled during homeostasis and in response to extrinsic stress. p53, a well-known tumor suppressor and transducer of diverse stress signals, has been implicated in maintaining HSC quiescence and self-renewal. However, the mechanisms that control its activity in HSCs, and how p53 activity contributes to HSC cell cycle control, are poorly understood. Here, we use a genetically engineered mouse to show that p53 C-terminal modification is critical for controlling HSC abundance during homeostasis and HSC and progenitor proliferation after irradiation. Preventing p53 C-terminal modification renders mice exquisitely radiosensitive due to defects in HSC/progenitor proliferation, a critical determinant for restoring hematopoiesis after irradiation. We show that fine-tuning the expression levels of the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor p21, a p53 target gene, contributes significantly to p53-mediated effects on the hematopoietic system. These results have implications for understanding cell competition in response to stresses involved in stem cell transplantation, recovery from adverse hematologic effects of DNA-damaging cancer therapies, and development of radioprotection strategies
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