Hypoxia-induced alterations in lipid polyunsaturation and associated proteins drive aggressive metastasis in pancreatic cancer the PPAR/hypoxia pathway.
In pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma, hypoxia is a crucial component of the tumour microenvironment and is associated with worse clinical outcomes.
APA
Agarwala PK, Singh A, et al. (2025). Hypoxia-induced alterations in lipid polyunsaturation and associated proteins drive aggressive metastasis in pancreatic cancer the PPAR/hypoxia pathway.. Molecular omics, 21(6), 736-746. https://doi.org/10.1039/d5mo00111k
MLA
Agarwala PK, et al.. "Hypoxia-induced alterations in lipid polyunsaturation and associated proteins drive aggressive metastasis in pancreatic cancer the PPAR/hypoxia pathway.." Molecular omics, vol. 21, no. 6, 2025, pp. 736-746.
PMID
41186383
Abstract
In pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma, hypoxia is a crucial component of the tumour microenvironment and is associated with worse clinical outcomes. Adaptation to extreme hypoxic settings is based on abnormal lipid metabolism, but insights into how hypoxia-regulated lipid changes link with aggressive migratory potential in pancreatic cancer are lacking. This study investigates the molecular processes, pathways, and critical proteins involved in hypoxia-induced lipidic and polyunsaturated fatty acid alterations in pancreatic cancer. Our findings elucidate increased multilayer unsaturation in FA chains of major lipid classes associated with greater migration and invasion, as well as higher abundances of particular desaturases. The expression of these proteins was verified in clinical tumour samples by unsaturated fatty acid biosynthesis-related gene enrichment score. High unsaturated fatty acid clusters were shown to be associated with a low survival rate. Pathway correlation and protein-protein interaction analysis indicated that the PPAR-hypoxia axis and SCD/FADS2/APOC3-HDLBP protein network are implicated in mediating the observed alterations in lipid pools and poly-unsaturation levels in pancreatic cancer under hypoxia. These results provide novel therapeutic targets in pancreatic cancer while improving our understanding of hypoxia-induced migratory potential in pancreatic cancer.
MeSH Terms
Humans; Pancreatic Neoplasms; Lipid Metabolism; Fatty Acids, Unsaturated; Tumor Microenvironment; Peroxisome Proliferator-Activated Receptors; Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic; Hypoxia; Signal Transduction; Carcinoma, Pancreatic Ductal; Protein Interaction Maps; Neoplasm Metastasis; Cell Line, Tumor; Cell Movement