| Literature DB >> 31164413 |
Erika Parasido1, George S Avetian1, Aisha Naeem1, Garrett Graham1, Michael Pishvaian1, Eric Glasgow1, Shaila Mudambi1, Yichien Lee1, Chukwuemeka Ihemelandu1, Muhammad Choudhry1, Ivana Peran1, Partha P Banerjee2, Maria Laura Avantaggiati1, Kirsten Bryant3, Elisa Baldelli4, Mariaelena Pierobon4, Lance Liotta4, Emanuel Petricoin4, Stanley T Fricke5, Aimy Sebastian6, Joseph Cozzitorto7, Gabriela G Loots6, Deepak Kumar8, Stephen Byers1, Eric Londin9, Analisa DiFeo10, Goutham Narla10, Jordan Winter7,11, Jonathan R Brody7, Olga Rodriguez1,5, Chris Albanese12,5.
Abstract
Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) is a highly aggressive disease with limited and, very often, ineffective medical and surgical therapeutic options. The treatment of patients with advanced unresectable PDAC is restricted to systemic chemotherapy, a therapeutic intervention to which most eventually develop resistance. Recently, nab-paclitaxel (n-PTX) has been added to the arsenal of first-line therapies, and the combination of gemcitabine and n-PTX has modestly prolonged median overall survival. However, patients almost invariably succumb to the disease, and little is known about the mechanisms underlying n-PTX resistance. Using the conditionally reprogrammed (CR) cell approach, we established and verified continuously growing cell cultures from treatment-naïve patients with PDAC. To study the mechanisms of primary drug resistance, nab-paclitaxel-resistant (n-PTX-R) cells were generated from primary cultures and drug resistance was verified in vivo, both in zebrafish and in athymic nude mouse xenograft models. Molecular analyses identified the sustained induction of c-MYC in the n-PTX-R cells. Depletion of c-MYC restored n-PTX sensitivity, as did treatment with either the MEK inhibitor, trametinib, or a small-molecule activator of protein phosphatase 2a. IMPLICATIONS: The strategies we have devised, including the patient-derived primary cells and the unique, drug-resistant isogenic cells, are rapid and easily applied in vitro and in vivo platforms to better understand the mechanisms of drug resistance and for defining effective therapeutic options on a patient by patient basis. ©2019 American Association for Cancer Research.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31164413 PMCID: PMC6726538 DOI: 10.1158/1541-7786.MCR-19-0191
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Cancer Res ISSN: 1541-7786 Impact factor: 5.852