| Literature DB >> 31024848 |
Natalia Anahi Juiz1, Juan Iovanna1, Nelson Dusetti1.
Abstract
Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) remains a major health problem because it induces almost systematic mortality. Carcinogenesis begins with genetic aberrations which trigger epigenetic modifications. While genetic mutations initiate tumorigenesis, they are unable to explain the vast heterogeneity observed among PDAC patients. Instead, epigenetic changes drive transcriptomic alterations that can regulate the malignant phenotype. The contribution of factors from the environment and tumor microenvironment defines different epigenetic landscapes that outline two clinical subtypes: basal, with the worst prognosis, and classical. The epigenetic nature of PDAC, as a reversible phenomenon, encouraged several studies to test epidrugs. However, these drugs lack specificity and although there are epigenetic patterns shared by all PDAC tumors, there are others that are specific to each subtype. Molecular characterization of the epigenetic mechanisms underlying PDAC heterogeneity could be an invaluable tool to predict personalized therapies, stratify patients and search for novel therapies with more specific phenotype-based targets. Novel therapeutic strategies using current anticancer compounds or existing drugs used in other pathologies, alone or in combination, could be used to kill tumor cells or convert aggressive tumors into a more benign phenotype.Entities:
Keywords: biomarkers; epigenetics; pancreatic cancer; therapy; tumor heterogeneity
Year: 2019 PMID: 31024848 PMCID: PMC6460948 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2019.00246
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Figure 1Developmental model for PDAC phenotypes. Carcinogenesis is initiated by a combination of certain mutations, frequently in genes such as KRAS, TP53, SMAD4, ARID1A, and CDKN2A. These mutations trigger epigenetic alterations by different mechanisms (DNA methylation, nc-RNAs, and histone modifications) and, combined with factors from the environment and tumor microenvironment, they establish subtype-specific epigenetic landscapes. These epigenetic landscapes drive transcriptomic alterations and so, they determine the basal and classical phenotypes. In the classical subtype several TFs including GATA6, FOS, FOXP1, and FOXP4 act at the super-enhancer level to regulate gene expression, they also regulate the expression of other TFs (HFFs, PDX1, MNX1, PPARs) with functions in pancreatic morphogenesis and lipid metabolism. In the basal subtype, which has a worse prognosis, MET was found to regulate basal-specific super-enhancers, gene networks downstream of MET include TFs such as MYC, MYBL1, E2F1, and SNAI2 known to play a role in proliferation and the epithelial to mesenchymal transition. As the nature of PDAC subtypes is not genetic, it could be possible to interconvert both subtypes just by inactivation of MET in basal or GATA6 in classical samples.