| Literature DB >> 36230914 |
Daiyong Deng1, Riya Patel1, Cheng-Yao Chiang1, Pingping Hou1,2,3.
Abstract
Pancreatic cancer has a notoriously poor prognosis, exhibits persistent drug resistance, and lacks a cure. Unique features of the pancreatic tumor microenvironment exacerbate tumorigenesis, metastasis, and therapy resistance. Recent studies emphasize the importance of exploiting cells in the tumor microenvironment to thwart cancers. In this review, we summarize the hallmarks of the multifaceted pancreatic tumor microenvironment, notably pancreatic stellate cells, tumor-associated fibroblasts, macrophages, and neutrophils, in the regulation of chemo-, radio-, immuno-, and targeted therapy resistance in pancreatic cancer. The molecular insight will facilitate the development of novel therapeutics against pancreatic cancer.Entities:
Keywords: pancreatic cancer; therapy resistance; tumor microenvironment
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36230914 PMCID: PMC9563251 DOI: 10.3390/cells11192952
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cells ISSN: 2073-4409 Impact factor: 7.666
Figure 1Hallmarks of the pancreatic tumor microenvironment. The unique features of the pancreatic tumor microenvironment compared to other solid cancers are summarized. Pancreatic cancer is composed of abundant stroma (fibroblasts, stellate cells, neuronal cells, endothelial cells, etc.) and immune suppressive cells. The dense extracellular matrix results in high tissue stiffness and severe hypoxia. The hyperproliferative tumor cells and active stroma deprive essential metabolites in situ, and the hostile milieu further exacerbates the exclusion of cytotoxic immune cells. Moreover, tumor cells benefit from cells of the tumor microenvironment to progress, migrate and escape from therapy. “+”, pro-tumor hallmarks; “−“, anti-tumor hallmarks.
Summary of therapy resistance mechanisms driven by tumor microenvironment in pancreatic cancer.
| Cell Type | Therapy | Resistance | Detailed Mechanism | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| PSCs | chemotherapy (gemcitabine) | Collagen I | Promote proliferation by MAPK pathway activation and chromatin remodeling | [ |
| Periostin | Induce ECM molecules, including collagen I | [ | ||
| fibronectin | Promote proliferation by MAPK pathway activation | [ | ||
| IGF1, IGF2 | Activate IGFR-PI3K-AKT pathway | [ | ||
| LIF | Activate Wnt and Hippo signaling pathways and induce EMT | [ | ||
| HGF | Activate c-Met-PI3K-Akt pathway and induce EMT | [ | ||
| CYR61 | Downregulate nucleoside transporters ENT1 and CNT3 | [ | ||
| Deoxycytidine | Compete with gemcitabine for deoxycytidine kinase-mediated phosphorylation | [ | ||
| immunotherapy | CXCL12 | Chemoattract CD8+ T cells via CXCL12-CXCR4 axis to sequester them in the panstromal compartment | [ | |
| Galectin-1 | Induce T cell apoptosis and Th2 differentiation | [ | ||
| IL-6 | Promote MDSC differentiation via STAT3 activation and suppress T cell proliferation | [ | ||
| CAFs | chemotherapy (gemcitabine) | 5′-nucleotidases | Entrap active gemcitabine intracellularly via downregulation of Nt5c1A, Nt5c3 | [ |
| Exosomes | Deliver SNAI1 and miR-146a to tumor cells via exosomes | [ | ||
| circFARP1 | Enhance LIF expression and secretion | [ | ||
| TGF-β | Upregulate ATF4 in tumor cells to activate ABCC1 expression | [ | ||
| SDF-1 | Form a reciprocal feedback loop with tumor cells via SDF-1/SATB-1 axis | [ | ||
| IL-6 | Activate JAK-STAT3 signaling pathway | [ | ||
| CXCL12 | Bind to CXCR4 to activate FAK, AKT, and ERK pathways | [ | ||
| chemotherapy (oxaliplatin) | IL-8 | Upregulate UPK1A-AS1 to facilitate DNA repair | [ | |
| chemotherapy (etoposide) | NO | Elevate IL-1β production in tumor cells | [ | |
| targeted therapy (EGFRi erlotinib) | NRG-1 | Activate ERBB3-AKT signaling pathway | [ | |
| immunotherapy | ECM | Form a physical barrier to impede T cell-tumor cell contact | [ | |
| ROS | Induce M2 TAM polarization | [ | ||
| / | Suppress immunogenic activities | [ | ||
| CXCL12 | Exclude T cells from tumor region by binding to CXCR4 | [ | ||
| PGE2 | Induce expression of immune checkpoints on CD4+ and CD8+ T cells | [ | ||
| TSLP | Induce Th2 cell polarization through dendritic cell conditioning | [ | ||
| targeted therapy (GOT2i) | Pyruvate | Provide tumor cells with pyruvate to maintain redox balance | [ | |
| TAMs | chemotherapy (gemcitabine) | Deoxycytidine | Interfere the uptake and metabolism of gemcitabine | [ |
| Cytidine deaminase | Elevate cytidine deaminase expression in tumor cells to inactivate gemcitabine | [ | ||
| targeted therapy (KRASi) | TGFβ | Activate canonical SMAD3/4 pathway and promote EMT | [ | |
| immunotherapy | Granulin | Induce fibrosis to prevent T cell infiltration | [ | |
| Mincle | Ligate to SAP130 expressed by tumor cells to suppress cancer immunity | [ | ||
| RIP1 | Regulate M2 TAM polarization | [ | ||
| radiotherapy, immunotherapy | / | n/a | [ | |
| TANs | chemotherapy (gemcitabine) | IL-6 | Activate JAK-STAT3 signaling pathway | [ |
| immunotherapy | NETs | Cause tumor CD8+ T cell inactivation and spatial exclusion | [ | |
| chemotherapy (FOLFIRINOX, gemcitabine, nab-paclitaxel), radiotherapy, immunotherapy | / | n/a | [ |
EGFRi, EGFR inhibitor; KRASi, KRAS inhibitor; n/a, not addressed.
Figure 2Therapy resistance mechanisms driven by the tumor microenvironment in pancreatic cancer. Role of the TME in chemoresistance are extensively studied, while its function in regulating tumor response to novel therapeutics needs further investigation. For chemoresistance mechanisms, the TME mainly provides growth factors to promote tumor cell survival and decreases the uptake or inactivate chemo drugs. For targeted therapy resistance, the TME usually nourishes tumor cells by activating parallel or alternative pathways. For immunotherapy resistance, the TME not only forms physical barriers to prevent the cytotoxic immune cell infiltration, but also produces immune suppressive factors to inactivate them. CDA, cytidine deaminase; dCK, deoxycytidine kinase; deoxyC, deoxycytidine.
Summary of representative clinical trials targeting TME in pancreatic cancer.
| Target | Agent | Combined Agent | Selected Clinical Trials |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||
| Hyaluronic acid | PEGPH20 | Avelumab, chemotherapy, pembrolizumab | NCT03481920, NCT01453153, NCT01839487, NCT04058964 |
| Plectin | ZB131 | NCT05074472 | |
| Galectin-9 | LYT-200 | NCT04666688 | |
| CTLA-4 | Zalifrelimab | NCT04827953 | |
| RARα/β | Am80 | NCT05064618 | |
|
| |||
| IGF1R | MK-0646 | Chemotherapy + TKI | NCT00769483 |
| Cixutumumab | NCT00617708 | ||
| AMG 479 | Chemotherapy, radiotherapy, AMG 655 | NCT00630552, NCT01298401, NCT00819169, NCT01231347 | |
| Metformin | Everolimus, octreotide LAR | NCT01971034, NCT02431676 | |
| MM-141 | Chemotherapy | NCT02399137 | |
| HER3 | Seribantumab | NCT04790695, NCT04383210 | |
| HMBD-001 | NCT05057013 | ||
| HER2/3 | Zenocutuzumab (MCLA-128) | NCT02912949 | |
| IL6R | Tocilizumab | Chemotherapy | NCT02767557, NCT04258150 |
| CNTO 328 | NCT00841191 | ||
| CXCR4 | MB1707 | NCT05465590 | |
| Plerixafor | Cemiplimab | NCT03277209, NCT02179970 | |
| IL1RAP | CAN04 | FOLFIRINOX | NCT04990037 |
| TGFβR | PF-06952229 | NCT03685591 | |
| SHR-1701 | Chemotherapy | NCT04624217 | |
| CSF1R | Cabiralizumab | Nivolumab, chemotherapy | NCT02526017, NCT03697564 |
| Pexidartinib | Durvalumab | NCT02777710 | |
| IMC-CS4 | Pembrolizumab, GVAX | NCT03153410 | |
| CXCR2 | SX-682 | Nivolumab | NCT04477343 |
|
| |||
| COX | Etodolac | NCT03838029 | |
| Celecoxib | Chemotherapy, irinotecan, interferon α-2b, DC vaccine | NCT00198081, NCT00068432, NCT00177853, NCT01111591 | |
| RIPK1 | GSK3145095 | NCT03681951 | |
|
| |||
| LIF | MSC-1 | NCT03490669 | |
| HGF | Ficlatuzumab | NCT03316599 | |
| CXCL12 | Olaptesed pegol (NOX-A12) | Pembrolizumab | NCT03168139, NCT04901741 |
| IL-6 | Siltuximab | Spartalizumab | NCT04191421 |
| IL-12 | VG161 | Nivolumab | NCT05162118 |
| IL-15 | ALT-803 | NCT02559674 | |
| IL-1β | Canakinumab | Spartalizumab, nab-paclitaxel, gemcitabine | NCT04581343, NCT04229004 |
| IL-2 | Aldesleukin | chemotherapy, anti-KRAS G12D mTCR PBL, anti-KRAS G12V mTCR PBL, pembrolizumab, anti-hCD70 CAR-transduced PBL, HER2Bi-armed T cells, sargramostim, ALVAC-CEA vaccine, neoantigen-specific TCR-T | NCT05194735, NCT02620865, NCT01583686, NCT01212887, NCT03745326, NCT01174121, NCT03190941, NCT02830724, NCT02662348, NCT00003125, NCT05194735, NCT04426669 |
| IL-8 | BMS-986253 | Nivolumab | NCT02451982 |
| VEGF | Bevacizumab | Chemotherapy, radiotherapy, TKI, cetuximab, ALT-803, cancer vaccine, immunotherapy, pembrolizumab, ZN-c3, PEGPH20, durvalumab, TGR-1202 | NCT00047710, NCT00417976, NCT00614653, NCT00460174, NCT00365144, NCT00602602, NCT00410774, NCT00126633 |
| Bevacizumab-800CW | NCT02743975 | ||
| Avastin | Chemotherapy, NANT-008, radiotherapy | NCT03127124, NCT00735306, NCT00609765 | |
| rhuMAB-VEGF | Chemotherapy | NCT00066677 | |
| TGF-β | HCW9218 | NCT05304936 | |
| BCA101 | NCT04429542 | ||
| NIS793 | PDR001, chemotherapy | NCT02947165, NCT05417386 | |
| AP 12009 | NCT00844064 | ||
| M-CSF | MCS110 | Spartalizumab | NCT02807844 |
| GM-CSF | Sargramostim | Carcinoembryonic antigen peptide 1-6D | NCT00669734, NCT00012246 |
| GM-CSF | iNeo-Vac-P01, TG-01 | NCT04810910, NCT03645148 | |
| OH2 injection | NCT04637698 | ||
| PANC 10.05 pcDNA-1/GM-Neo | NCT01088789 | ||
| PANVAC™-VF | NCT00088660 | ||
TKI, tyrosine kinase inhibitor; PBL, peripheral blood lymphocyte.