| Literature DB >> 32466260 |
Prasanta Dutta1, Susana Castro Pando2, Marilina Mascaro2, Erick Riquelme2, Michelle Zoltan2, Niki M Zacharias1,3, Seth T Gammon1, David Piwnica-Worms1, Mark D Pagel1, Subrata Sen4, Anirban Maitra5, Shayan Shams6, Florencia McAllister2, Pratip K Bhattacharya1.
Abstract
While pancreatic cancer (PC) survival rates have recently shown modest improvement, the disease remains largely incurable. Early detection of pancreatic cancer may result in improved outcomes and therefore, methods for early detection of cancer, even premalignant lesions, may provide more favorable outcomes. Pancreatic intraepithelial neoplasias (PanINs) have been identified as premalignant precursor lesions to pancreatic cancer. However, conventional imaging methods used for screening high-risk populations do not have the sensitivity to detect PanINs. Here, we have employed hyperpolarized metabolic imaging in vivo and nuclear magnetic resonance (1H-NMR) metabolomics ex vivo to identify and understand metabolic changes, towards enabling detection of early PanINs and progression to advanced PanINs lesions that precede pancreatic cancer formation. Progression of disease from tissue containing predominantly low-grade PanINs to tissue with high-grade PanINs showed a decreasing alanine/lactate ratio from high-resolution NMR metabolomics ex vivo. Hyperpolarized magnetic resonance spectroscopy (HP-MRS) allows over 10,000-fold sensitivity enhancement relative to conventional magnetic resonance. Real-time HP-MRS was employed to measure non-invasively changes of alanine and lactate metabolites with disease progression and in control mice in vivo, following injection of hyperpolarized [1-13C] pyruvate. The alanine-to-lactate signal intensity ratio was found to decrease as the disease progressed from low-grade PanINs to high-grade PanINs. The biochemical changes of alanine transaminase (ALT) and lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) enzyme activity were assessed. These results demonstrate that there are significant alterations of ALT and LDH activities during the transformation from early to advanced PanINs lesions. Furthermore, we demonstrate that real-time conversion kinetic rate constants (kPA and kPL) can be used as metabolic imaging biomarkers of pancreatic premalignant lesions. Findings from this emerging HP-MRS technique can be translated to the clinic for detection of pancreatic premalignant lesion in high-risk populations.Entities:
Keywords: MRS; early detection; hyperpolarization; kinetic rate constant and modeling; metabolic imaging; metabolic plasticity and PanINs progression; metabolic rewiring; pancreatic cancer
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32466260 PMCID: PMC7279395 DOI: 10.3390/ijms21103722
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 6.208
Figure 1(A) Representative Hematoxylin and Eosin (H&E) micrographs for different mice groups. Histological staining demonstrates the differences in morphology and cellularity in normal pancreas (control 20 wks) and early- (P48:Cre; LSL-KRASG12D—KC; 20 wks) and advanced-stage (KC 30 wks) pancreatic intraepithelial neoplasias (PanINs). (B) Lesion quantification as presented by the percent of surface area varied with PanINs progression from early to advanced stage. Normalized values of active alanine transaminase (ALT) and lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) enzyme concentrations for different mice groups (n =8) are shown in (C) and (D) respectively. Normal pancreas and early-stage PanINs demonstrate high concentration of ALT and low levels of LDH, whereas the advanced-stage PanINs show low concentration of ALT and high concentration of LDH measured in mU/mg unit. * means p < 0.05; ** means p < 0.001.
Figure 2(A) Steady-state high-resolution nuclear magnetic resonance (1H- NMR) spectra of ex vivo tissue samples for different mouse groups (n = 10). The alanine and lactate peak intensity alters inversely with PanINs progression. For alanine, it decreases, but lactate peak intensity increases as the PanINs progress from early to advanced stage. (B) The net ratio of alanine to lactate (Alanine/Lactate) gradually reduces with PanINs progression to advanced stages. ** means p < 0.001.
Figure 3T2-weighted coronal MR image, in vivo 13C MR spectra (acquired from selected slabs) and normalized signal intensity of different metabolites presented for (A) control mice with 20 weeks of age, (B) KC mice with an age of 20 weeks, and (C) KC mice with an age of 30 weeks. MRI images depict the smaller number of nodules on early stage PanINs (B) and the number and the size of the nodules increase as the PanINs progress to advanced stages (C). The real-time 13C MR spectra were acquired in vivo following injection of hyperpolarized pyruvate. The lactate production is significantly higher in advanced PanINs. The time evolution of all three metabolites was captured up to two minutes, and the experimental data were fitted to unidirectional kinetic modelling (C) for apparent rate constants kPA and kPL determination. The fitted parameters are summarized in Table 1.
Real-time in vivo metabolic flux data obtained by HP-MRS.
| Mice Group | Ala/Pyr | Lac/Pyr | Kinetic Constant kPA, (s−1) | Kinetic Constant kPL, (s−1) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Control (20 weeks) | 0.195 ± 0.004 | 0.261 ± 0.003 | 0.0098 ± 0.0005 | 0.0125 ± 0.0005 |
| KC (20 weeks) | 0.132 ± 0.005 | 0.452 ± 0.002 | 0.0076 ± 0.0006 | 0.0224 ± 0.0004 |
| KC (30 weeks) | 0.096 ± 0.006 | 0.643 ± 0.003 | 0.0055 ± 0.0005 | 0.0296 ± 0.0004 |
Alanine-to-pyruvate ratio (Ala/Pyr) and the kinetic constant kPA values decrease as the PanINs progress to advanced stages. In contrast, lactate-to-pyruvate ratio (Lac/Pyr) and the kinetic constant kPL values increase in advanced stages of PanINs.
Figure 4(A) Immunohistochemistry staining of LDH-A protein expression level for normal pancreas (control 20 wks) and early- (KC 20 wks) and advanced-stage (30 wks) PanINs. (B) Comparison of positive staining (%) scores among the tree different mice groups (n = 10). The percentage of LDH-A positive staining significantly increases as the PanINs progress to advanced stage. (C) A schematic of conversion kinetics of pyruvate to lactate and alanine and the corresponding conversion rate constants (kPL and kPA). The PanIN progression significantly alters these enzymatic kinetics. * means p < 0.05; ** means p < 0.001.