EMT-Induced Gemcitabine Resistance in Pancreatic Cancer Involves the Functional Loss of Equilibrative Nucleoside Transporter 1.
Brenna WeadickDebasis NayakAvinash K PersaudSau Wai HungRadhika RajMoray J CampbellWei ChenJunan LiTerence M WilliamsRajgopal GovindarajanPublished in: Molecular cancer therapeutics (2020)
Epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) in cancer cells drives cancer chemoresistance, yet the molecular events of EMT that underpin the acquisition of chemoresistance are poorly understood. Here, we demonstrate a loss of gemcitabine chemosensitivity facilitated by human equilibrative nucleoside transporter 1 (ENT1) during EMT in pancreatic cancer and identify that cadherin switching from the epithelial (E) to neuronal (N) type, a hallmark of EMT, contributes to this loss. Our findings demonstrate that N-cadherin decreases ENT1 expression, membrane localization, and gemcitabine transport, while E-cadherin augments each of these. Besides E- and N-cadherin, another epithelial cell adhesion molecule, EpCAM, played a more prominent role in determining ENT1 membrane localization. Forced expression of EpCAM opposed cadherin switching with restored ENT1 expression, membrane localization, and gemcitabine transport in EMT-committed pancreatic cancer cells. In gemcitabine-treated mice, EpCAM-positive tumors had high ENT1 expression and reduced metastasis, whereas tumors with N-cadherin expression resisted gemcitabine treatment and formed extensive secondary metastatic nodules. Tissue microarray profiling and multiplexed IHC analysis of pancreatic cancer patient-derived primary tumors revealed EpCAM and ENT1 cell surface coexpression is favored, and ENT1 plasma membrane expression positively predicted median overall survival times in patients treated with adjuvant gemcitabine. Together, our findings identify ENT1 as an inadvertent target of EMT signaling mediated by cadherin switching and provide a mechanism by which mesenchymal pancreatic cancer cells evade gemcitabine therapy during EMT.
Keyphrases
- cell adhesion
- epithelial mesenchymal transition
- poor prognosis
- locally advanced
- transforming growth factor
- signaling pathway
- squamous cell carcinoma
- circulating tumor cells
- single cell
- small cell lung cancer
- endothelial cells
- type diabetes
- adipose tissue
- cell surface
- drug induced
- oxidative stress
- bone marrow
- insulin resistance
- blood brain barrier
- brain injury
- high glucose
- single molecule