The systemic activin response to pancreatic cancer: implications for effective cancer cachexia therapy.
Xiaoling ZhongMarianne PonsChristophe PoirierYanlin JiangJianguo LiuGeorge E SanduskySafi ShahdaAttila NakeebC Max SchmidtMichael G HouseEugene P CeppaNicholas J ZyromskiYunlong LiuGuanglong JiangMarion E CouchLeonidas G KoniarisTeresa A ZimmersPublished in: Journal of cachexia, sarcopenia and muscle (2019)
Pancreatic adenocarcinoma tumours are a source of activin and elicit a systemic activin response in hosts. Human tumours express activins and related factors, while mortality correlates with tumour activin A expression. PDAC tumours also choreograph a systemic activin response that induces organ-specific and gene-specific expression of activin isoforms and muscle wasting. Systemic blockade of activin signalling could preserve muscle and prolong survival, while skeletal muscle-specific activin blockade was only protective for weight loss. Our findings suggest the potential and need for gene-specific and organ-specific interventions. Finally, development of more effective cancer cachexia therapy might require identifying agents that effectively and/or selectively inhibit autocrine vs. paracrine activin signalling.