Harnessing cuproptosis for pancreatic cancer therapy: From molecular insights to clinical prospects.
Pancreatic cancer (PC) remains a high-fatality malignancy with limited clinical progress, characterized by aggressive biology, marked resistance to standard therapies, and dismal outcomes.
APA
Darzi A, Boroumandi S, et al. (2025). Harnessing cuproptosis for pancreatic cancer therapy: From molecular insights to clinical prospects.. Biomedicine & pharmacotherapy = Biomedecine & pharmacotherapie, 193, 118852. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biopha.2025.118852
MLA
Darzi A, et al.. "Harnessing cuproptosis for pancreatic cancer therapy: From molecular insights to clinical prospects.." Biomedicine & pharmacotherapy = Biomedecine & pharmacotherapie, vol. 193, 2025, pp. 118852.
PMID
41337879
Abstract
Pancreatic cancer (PC) remains a high-fatality malignancy with limited clinical progress, characterized by aggressive biology, marked resistance to standard therapies, and dismal outcomes. Even with state-of-the-art resection, radiotherapy, and multidrug chemotherapy, median survival benefits are modest, highlighting an urgent need for mechanism-based interventions. Cuproptosis, a newly delineated modality of regulated cell death initiated by intracellular copper accumulation and mitochondrial stress, presents a biologically coherent therapeutic avenue. Distinct from apoptosis, necroptosis, and ferroptosis, cuproptosis is driven by the direct binding of copper to lipoylated enzymes of the tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle, resulting in bioenergetic failure, misfolded protein aggregation, and collapse of cytotoxic proteostasis. Converging studies suggest that copper disequilibrium and metabolic reprogramming are recurrent features of PC, potentially contributing to malignant progression, immune evasion, and chemoresistance. These insights motivate two complementary strategies: first, therapeutic manipulation of copper flux, via chelators, ionophores, or transport modulators, to selectively trigger cuproptosis in tumor cells; and second, sensitization of mitochondrial metabolism, through targeting lipoic-acid pathway components, pyruvate utilization, or TCA load, to lower the threshold for cuproptotic killing. In parallel, multi-omic interrogation of cuproptosis-associated genes, proteins, and metabolites may yield prognostic and predictive biomarkers, enabling risk-adapted treatment selection and rational combinations with cytotoxic, targeted, or immunotherapeutic modalities. This review synthesizes recent advances on cuproptosis in PC and outlines its translational potential as both a therapeutic target and a biomarker framework.
MeSH Terms
Humans; Pancreatic Neoplasms; Copper; Animals; Antineoplastic Agents; Mitochondria