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Decoding the diabetes-pancreatic adenocarcinoma connection: the critical role of PILRA in intermediate monocyte activity.

BMC medical genomics 2026 Vol.19(1) p. 33

Lv C, Liu Z, Zhang S, Yang S, Wang G, Xiao J

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Diabetes is a well-known risk factor for pancreatic adenocarcinoma (PAAD), yet the underlying molecular mechanisms remain unclear.

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BibTeX ↓ RIS ↓
APA Lv C, Liu Z, et al. (2026). Decoding the diabetes-pancreatic adenocarcinoma connection: the critical role of PILRA in intermediate monocyte activity.. BMC medical genomics, 19(1), 33. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12920-026-02310-z
MLA Lv C, et al.. "Decoding the diabetes-pancreatic adenocarcinoma connection: the critical role of PILRA in intermediate monocyte activity.." BMC medical genomics, vol. 19, no. 1, 2026, pp. 33.
PMID 41546015

Abstract

Diabetes is a well-known risk factor for pancreatic adenocarcinoma (PAAD), yet the underlying molecular mechanisms remain unclear. This study employs single-cell sequencing to analyze gene expression patterns and uses Mendelian randomization to assess the association between genetic variations in specific genes and the risk of PAAD. Our findings reveal a significant reduction in the proportion of monocytes in patients with both diabetes and PAAD. Monocytes play a crucial role in the progression of both diseases. Notably, we identified an increase in intermediate monocytes (CD14 + + CD16+) in both conditions. These cells exhibit significant activation of the LGALS9-CD45 receptor, increased metabolic activity, and enhanced involvement in disease pathways. We demonstrate that intermediate monocytes are key cellular players in the link between diabetes and PAAD. Using dual-sample Mendelian randomization, we identified genetic variations in PILRA, a highly variable gene in intermediate monocytes, as a risk factor for PAAD. PILRA + intermediate monocytes show higher metabolic activity and stronger immune cell communication compared to PILRA- cells, suggesting an important role in tumor microenvironment regulation and immune cell activation inhibition. This biological function is associated with cytokine-mediated signaling, focal adhesion, and NOD-like receptor signaling pathways. RT-qPCR validation of PBMC samples indicates a statistically significant, progressive increase in PILRA expression in patients with PAAD, diabetes, and those with both conditions. In summary, this study uncovers the critical role of intermediate monocytes in diabetes-induced PAAD and proposes PILRA as a potential therapeutic target.

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