| Literature DB >> 35122059 |
Mengyu Tu1, Lukas Klein1, Elisa Espinet2,3, Theodoros Georgomanolis4, Florian Wegwitz5, Xiaojuan Li6, Laura Urbach1, Adi Danieli-Mackay7, Stefan Küffer7, Kamil Bojarczuk8, Athanasia Mizi7, Ufuk Günesdogan6, Björn Chapuy8, Zuguang Gu9,10, Albrecht Neesse1, Uday Kishore11, Philipp Ströbel7, Elisabeth Hessmann1, Stephan A Hahn12, Andreas Trumpp2,3, Argyris Papantonis7, Volker Ellenrieder1, Shiv K Singh13.
Abstract
Large-scale genomic profiling of pancreatic cancer (PDAC) has revealed two distinct subtypes: 'classical' and 'basal-like'. Their variable coexistence within the stromal immune microenvironment is linked to differential prognosis; however, the extent to which these neoplastic subtypes shape the stromal immune landscape and impact clinical outcome remains unclear. By combining preclinical models, patient-derived xenografts, as well as FACS-sorted PDAC patient biopsies, we show that the basal-like neoplastic state is sustained via BRD4-mediated cJUN/AP1 expression, which induces CCL2 to recruit tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-α-secreting macrophages. TNF-α+ macrophages force classical neoplastic cells into an aggressive phenotypic state via lineage reprogramming. Integration of ATAC-, ChIP- and RNA-seq data revealed distinct JUNB/AP1 (classical) and cJUN/AP1 (basal-like)-driven regulation of PDAC subtype identity. Pharmacological inhibition of BRD4 led to suppression of the BRD4-cJUN-CCL2-TNF-α axis, restoration of classical subtype identity and a favorable prognosis. Hence, patient-tailored therapy for a cJUNhigh/TNF-αhigh subtype is paramount in overcoming highly inflamed and aggressive PDAC states.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 35122059 DOI: 10.1038/s43018-021-00258-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Cancer ISSN: 2662-1347