| Literature DB >> 22466618 |
Michael A Jacobetz1, Derek S Chan, Albrecht Neesse, Tashinga E Bapiro, Natalie Cook, Kristopher K Frese, Christine Feig, Tomoaki Nakagawa, Meredith E Caldwell, Heather I Zecchini, Martijn P Lolkema, Ping Jiang, Anne Kultti, Curtis B Thompson, Daniel C Maneval, Duncan I Jodrell, Gregory I Frost, H M Shepard, Jeremy N Skepper, David A Tuveson.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDA) is characterised by stromal desmoplasia and vascular dysfunction, which critically impair drug delivery. This study examines the role of an abundant extracellular matrix component, the megadalton glycosaminoglycan hyaluronan (HA), as a novel therapeutic target in PDA.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22466618 PMCID: PMC3551211 DOI: 10.1136/gutjnl-2012-302529
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Gut ISSN: 0017-5749 Impact factor: 23.059
Human TMA
| Tissue origin | % Cases with +HA staining |
| Breast | Tumour (N=117, 56%) |
| Normal (N=13, 23%) | |
| Prostate | Tumour (N=110, 46%) |
| Normal (N=17, 5.8%) | |
| Bladder | Tumour (TCC) (N=106, 43%) |
| Normal (N=8, 0%) | |
| Stomach | Tumour (adenocarcinoma) (N=95, 42%) |
| Normal (N=14, 0%) | |
| Pleura | Tumour (mesothelioma) (N=52, 37%) |
| Normal (N=15, 0%) | |
| Lung | NSCLC (N=169, 29%) |
| SCLC (N=21, 10%) | |
| Normal (N=21, 0%) | |
| Ovary | Tumour (N=185, 12%) |
| Normal (N=31, 0%) | |
| Colon | Tumour (N=136, 28%) |
| Normal (N=25, 8%) | |
| Bone marrow | Multiple myeloma (N=27, 3.7%) |
| Normal (N=35, 0%) | |
| Pancreas | Ductal adenocarcinoma (N=99, 90%) |
| Acinar cell carcinoma (N=2, 0%) | |
| Mucinous adenocarcinoma (N=5, 100%) | |
| Papillary adenocarcinoma (N=4, 25%) | |
| Squamous cell carcinoma (N=2, 100%) | |
| Normal (N=25, 4%) |
HA staining is most common in pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma in comparison to other major human tumours.
HA, hyaluronan. TMA, tissue microarray. TCC, transitional cell carcinoma. NSCLC, non-small cell lung carcinoma. SCLC, small cell lung carcinoma.
Figure 1Hyaluronan (HA) accumulates in pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDA) and may be rapidly and sustainably degraded by PEGPH20. (A) HA expression in human pancreatic cancer samples (i–iii) varies from low expression (HA1+) to high expression (HA3+), with little HA detected in normal pancreas (top left panel) (scale bar: inset 300 μm, 100 μm). (B) HA expression in normal pancreas and PDA over time after treatment with PEGPH20. PEGPH20 treatment specifically degrades HA in normal pancreas (top row) 1 h after treatment. Maximal HA degradation was achieved in KPC tumours 8 h after PEGPH20 treatment that still remained low even 72 h after treatment. n=3 mice per time point (scale bar: 200 μm).
Figure 2Depletion of hyaluronan improves vascular patency and increases chemotherapeutic delivery. (A) Fluorescence images of KPC tumours from vehicle-treated (top row, V) and PEGPH20-treated (bottom row, P) mice (n=4 animals in each cohort) terminally perfused with fluorescent biotinylated lectin (red). Total blood vessels are detected with MECA-32 antibody (green). White arrows denote functional vessels (red and green). Yellow arrows denote non-functional vessels (green only). Quantification of vessel patency indicates a significant increase in functional vessels after treatment with PEGPH20 (n=4 mice in each cohort, >100 vessels per mouse). Scale bar = 100 μm. Mann–Whitney U test, *p=0.0286. (B) Quantification of mean vessel area (in square micrometres) from anti-CD31-stained KPC tumours from vehicle-treated (V) or PEGPH20-treated (P) mice. A significant increase in mean vessel area is observed after treatment with PEGPH20, Mann–Whitney U test, **p=0.0085. (C) Fluorescent image of representative KPC tumour from vehicle-treated (top panel) and PEGPH20-treated (bottom panel) mice terminally perfused with autofluorescent small-molecule doxorubicin (pseudo-coloured green, n=4 mice in each cohort). Scale bar = 1 mm. Dotted white line denotes border between tumour core and adjacent diseased pancreatic tissue. Quantification of intratumoral doxorubicin as measured by fluorescence ratio in vehicle-treated (V) and PEGPH20-treated (P) KPC mice pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma. Significant increase in intratumoral doxorubicin in PEGPH20-treated samples, Mann–Whitney U test, *p=0.0260. (D) Quantification of intratumoral gemcitabine triphosphate (dFdCTP), the active metabolite of gemcitabine (G), from vehicle- and PEGPH20-pretreated KPC mice. Significant increase in dFdCTP in PEGPH20-treated tumours, Mann–Whitney U test, **p=0.0053.
Figure 3Depletion of hyaluronan increases macromolecular permeability and induces ultrastructural changes in tumour endothelia. (A) Representative fluorescent images of KPC tumour from vehicle-treated (top panel) and PEGPH20-treated (bottom panel) mice (n=4 mice for each cohort). Mice terminally treated with either low (40 kDa) or high (2 MDa) molecular weight dextrans with biotinylated lectin demonstrate a considerable increase in stromal and vessel permeability at the tumour core in PEGPH20-treated tumours. Arrows denote functional vessels in the field. Scale bar = 500 μm. (B) Scanning electron microscopy images of pancreatic blood vessels in PC (LSL-Trp53) (upper two panels) and KPC (LSL-Kras) (lower two panels) mice following treatment with either vehicle or PEGPH20 (n=4 mice for each cohort) reveal endothelial fenestrations (white arrowheads) only in PEGPH20-treated KPC mice. (C) Quantification of density of fenestrae in intratumoral KPC blood vessels (n=3 mice for each cohort, four random vessels per mouse) revealed a significant increase following treatment with PEGPH20 (***p<0.0001). (D) Representative transmission electron micrographs from vehicle-treated (left panels) and PEGPH20-treated (right panels) tumours (n=4 mice for each cohort). Vehicle-treated tumours demonstrate juxtaposed endothelial cell membranes (red arrowheads), while prominent interendothelial gaps are present following treatment with PEGPH20 (designated by white diamonds, endothelial cell membranes denoted by blue arrowheads).
Figure 4Combination therapy with PEGPH20 and gemcitabine inhibits tumour growth and significantly extends survival. (A) Tumour volume measurements from mice treated for 5 days with vehicle (V) (n=7), gemcitabine (G) (n=11), PEGPH20 (P) (n=10) and gemcitabine/PEGPH20 combination (P+G) (n=11) demonstrate cytostasis only in response to gemcitabine/PEGPH20 combination therapy. (B) Proliferation of pancreatic tumour cells in response to PEGPH20 treatment. A significant decrease in pancreatic tumour cell proliferation is observed 5 days after treatment with PEGPH20 and gemcitabine compared with gemcitabine alone. Mann–Whitney U test, *p=0.0432. (C) Kaplan–Meier survival curve for vehicle-treated (n=8, grey dotted line), gemcitabine-treated (n=15, black dotted line), PEGPH20-treated (n=12, green line) and gemcitabine/PEGPH20-treated (n=10, red line) KPC cohorts. A significant increase in survival was observed in gemcitabine/PEGPH20-treated mice relative to the gemcitabine-treated cohort. Log-rank ***p=0.0002, HR 0.06794. PH3, phospho-histone H3.