Beta cells are essential drivers of pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma development.
1/5 보강
Pancreatic endocrine-exocrine crosstalk plays a key role in normal physiology and disease.
APA
Garcia CC, Venkat A, et al. (2024). Beta cells are essential drivers of pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma development.. bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology. https://doi.org/10.1101/2024.11.29.626079
MLA
Garcia CC, et al.. "Beta cells are essential drivers of pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma development.." bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology, 2024.
PMID
39677599 ↗
Abstract 한글 요약
Pancreatic endocrine-exocrine crosstalk plays a key role in normal physiology and disease. For instance, endocrine islet beta (β) cell secretion of insulin or cholecystokinin (CCK) promotes progression of pancreatic adenocarcinoma (PDAC), an exocrine cell-derived tumor. However, the cellular and molecular mechanisms that govern endocrine-exocrine signaling in tumorigenesis remain incompletely understood. We find that β cell ablation impedes PDAC development in mice, arguing that the endocrine pancreas is critical for exocrine tumorigenesis. Conversely, obesity induces β cell hormone dysregulation, alters CCK-dependent peri-islet exocrine cell transcriptional states, and enhances islet proximal tumor formation. Single-cell RNA-sequencing, latent-space archetypal and trajectory analysis, and genetic lineage tracing reveal that obesity stimulates postnatal immature β cell expansion and adaptation towards a pro-tumorigenic CCK+ state via JNK/cJun stress-responsive signaling. These results define endocrine-exocrine signaling as a driver of PDAC development and uncover new avenues to target the endocrine pancreas to subvert exocrine tumorigenesis.