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KRAS mutation and epithelial-macrophage interplay in pancreatic neoplastic transformation.

Faraz BishehsariLijuan ZhangUsman BarlassNailliw Z PreiteSanja TurturroMatthew S NajorBrandon B ShetuniJanet P ZayasMahboobeh MahdaviniaAbde M AbukhdeirAli Keshavarzian
Published in: International journal of cancer (2018)
Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDA) is characterized by epithelial mutations in KRAS and prominent tumor-associated inflammation, including macrophage infiltration. But knowledge of early interactions between neoplastic epithelium and macrophages in PDA carcinogenesis is limited. Using a pancreatic organoid model, we found that the expression of mutant KRAS in organoids increased (i) ductal to acinar gene expression ratios, (ii) epithelial cells proliferation and (iii) colony formation capacity in vitro, and endowed pancreatic cells with the ability to generate neoplastic tumors in vivo. KRAS mutations induced a protumorigenic phenotype in macrophages. Altered macrophages decreased epithelial pigment epithelial derived factor (PEDF) expression and induced a cancerous phenotype. We validated our findings using annotated patient samples from The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) and in our human PDA specimens. Epithelium-macrophage cross-talk occurs early in pancreatic carcinogenesis where KRAS directly induces cancer-related phenotypes in epithelium, and also promotes a protumorigenic phenotype in macrophages, in turn augmenting neoplastic growth.
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