| Literature DB >> 24587996 |
Zhiwen Xiao1, Guopei Luo1, Chen Liu2, Chuntao Wu2, Liang Liu2, Zuqiang Liu1, Quanxing Ni1, Jiang Long3, Xianjun Yu1.
Abstract
As the most challenging human malignancies, pancreatic cancer is characterized by its insidious symptoms, low rate of surgical resection, high risk of local invasion, metastasis and recurrence, and overall dismal prognosis. Lymphatic metastasis, above all, is recognized as an early adverse event in progression of pancreatic cancer and has been described to be an independent poor prognostic factor. It should be noted that the occurrence of lymphatic metastasis is not a casual or stochastic but an ineluctable and designed event. Increasing evidences suggest that metastasis-initiating cells (MICs) and the microenvironments may act as a double-reed style in this crime. However, the exact mechanisms on how they function synergistically for this dismal clinical course remain largely elusive. Therefore, a better understanding of its molecular and cellular mechanisms involved in pancreatic lymphatic metastasis is urgently required. In this review, we will summarize the latest advances on lymphatic metastasis in pancreatic cancer.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24587996 PMCID: PMC3919106 DOI: 10.1155/2014/925845
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
Markers of cancer stem cells in pancreatic cancer.
| Cancer stem cells | Markers | References |
|---|---|---|
| Tumor-initiating population | EpCAM/ESA+CD44+CD24+ | [ |
| CD133+ | [ | |
| ALDH-1+ | [ | |
| Side population/ABCG2 | [ | |
| Metastasis-initiating cells | CD133+CXCR-4+ | [ |
Figure 1Lymphatic metastasis in PDAC: it is not a monodrama. Lymphatic metastasis is the concurrent effect of interaction among cancer cells, tumor microenvironment, and premetastatic site niche. The role of evolution of cancer cell and microenvironment in this abysmal biologic process is performed in a “double-reed” style. Under the influence of fertile microenvironment and accumulating gene alterations (KRAS, SMAD4, TP53+, Ink4a/Arf, etc.), a normal pancreatic epithelial cell underwent the long processes such as “acinar-to-ductal metaplasia” and “epithelia-mesenchymal transition” and finally sequentially forming a metastasis-initiating cell, which could initiate lymphatic metastasis under the guidance of specific chemokines (SDF-1, CCL19/CCL21, VEGF-C/D, etc.). Accordingly, potential therapeutic strategies targeted to the lymphatic metastasis of pancreatic cancer include: (1) targeting cancer cells (CSCs, MICs), (2) targeting molecules of signal pathways to the tumor, and (3) subverting the tumor microenvironments and niche.
Figure 2Establishment of a highly lymphatic metastatic subline BxPC-3-LN including 5 steps: (1) subcutaneous footpad injection of nude mice with BxPC-3 cells; (2) doing autopsy to remove the possible metastatic lymph nodes which were confirmed by pathological confirmation; (3) isolation of metastatic cancer cells from identified lymph nodes; (4) selection and subculture of cells; (5) reinjection in nude mice for additional rounds and finally obtaining desired cell line BxPC-3-LN. And in the end, further analysis of two cell lines is urgently required such as comparison of gene and miRNAs expression profile via microarray.
Metastasis-related miRNAs in pancreatic cancer.
| miRNA | Impact on metastatic processes | Target genes | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| miR-146a/b | Suppressing | EGFR, IRAK-1, | [ |
| let-7 family | Suppressing | HMGA2, MYC, NOTCH, RAS, | [ |
| miR-141, and miR-200a/b/c, | Suppressing | ZEB1, ZEB2, E-CADHERIN, N-CADHERIN | [ |
| miR-34 family | Suppressing | NOTCH, BCL-2, NANOG, SOX2, and N-MYC | [ |
| miR-20a | Suppressing | STAT3 | [ |
| miR-126 | Suppressing | ADAM9 | [ |
| miR-150 | Suppressing | MUC4 | [ |
| miR-30 family | Suppressing | VIMENTIN and SNAIL-1 | [ |
| miR-143/145 | Suppressing | KRAS, RREB1 | [ |
| miR-486 | Promoting | CD40 | [ |
| miR-224 | Promoting | CD40 | [ |
| miR-10a, miR-10b | Promoting | HOXA1, HOXB1, and HOXB3 | [ |
| miRNA-27a | Promoting | SPRY2 | [ |