Genotype tunes pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma tissue tension to induce matricellular fibrosis and tumor progression.
Hanane LaklaiYekaterina A MiroshnikovaMichael W PickupEric A CollissonGrace E KimAlex S BarrettRyan C HillJohnathon N LakinsDavid D SchlaepferJanna K MouwValerie S LeBleuNilotpal RoySergey V NovitskiyJulia S JohansenValeria PoliRaghu KalluriChristine A Iacobuzio-DonahueLaura D WoodMatthias HebrokKirk HansenHarold L MosesValerie M WeaverPublished in: Nature medicine (2016)
Fibrosis compromises pancreatic ductal carcinoma (PDAC) treatment and contributes to patient mortality, yet antistromal therapies are controversial. We found that human PDACs with impaired epithelial transforming growth factor-β (TGF-β) signaling have high epithelial STAT3 activity and develop stiff, matricellular-enriched fibrosis associated with high epithelial tension and shorter patient survival. In several KRAS-driven mouse models, both the loss of TGF-β signaling and elevated β1-integrin mechanosignaling engaged a positive feedback loop whereby STAT3 signaling promotes tumor progression by increasing matricellular fibrosis and tissue tension. In contrast, epithelial STAT3 ablation attenuated tumor progression by reducing the stromal stiffening and epithelial contractility induced by loss of TGF-β signaling. In PDAC patient biopsies, higher matricellular protein and activated STAT3 were associated with SMAD4 mutation and shorter survival. The findings implicate epithelial tension and matricellular fibrosis in the aggressiveness of SMAD4 mutant pancreatic tumors and highlight STAT3 and mechanics as key drivers of this phenotype.
Keyphrases
- transforming growth factor
- epithelial mesenchymal transition
- cell proliferation
- poor prognosis
- case report
- endothelial cells
- cardiovascular disease
- mouse model
- magnetic resonance imaging
- computed tomography
- coronary artery disease
- binding protein
- free survival
- atrial fibrillation
- smooth muscle
- ultrasound guided
- protein protein