Abstract

Abstract Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) is the fourth most lethal cancer in the United States with an estimated 60,430 new cases and 48,220 deaths in 2021. PDACs are characterized by extensive desmoplastic stroma and severe hypovascularity, resulting in an intra-tumoral hypoxic microenvironment. In response to hypoxic stress, cancer cells set off many adaptive responses including metabolism regulation, cell survival, and inflammation through the stabilization and activation of the hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF) family of transcription factors. In this study, we used the gene-editing tool CRISPR-cas9 to knock out HIF1A and investigate whether HIF1A affects the radioresistant and invasive characteristics of PDACs in a KPC cell line model. To first observe how HIF1A affects PDAC radioresistance, we performed a clonogenic survival assay with increasing doses of radiation on both wild-type and HIF1A knockout (KO) cells treated and untreated with CoCl2-induced hypoxia conditions (100 uM and 200 uM CoCl2). Our data showed that under hypoxia, KO cells exhibited significant cell death when treated with 6, 8, and 10 Gy of radiation as compared to wild-type KPC cells, emphasizing the role of HIF1A in radiation resistance. In addition, to understand the role of HIF1A in regulating the invasive behavior of PDACs, we performed a cell proliferation assay on wild-type and KO KPC cells. HIF1A KO cells treated with CoCl2 exhibited significantly reduced proliferation compared to wild-type cells also treated with CoCl2 (p<0.01), though no significant difference was observed between untreated HIF1A KO and untreated wild-type cells (p>0.05). Because western blot demonstrated increased HIF1A expression in wild-type cells following CoCl2 treatment, our results provided evidence for the role of HIF1A activation in promoting PDAC invasiveness. Through western blot, we also confirmed the association between HIF1A expression with p53 degradation in PDAC. We used COREMINE, a literature mining tool, to map a direct interaction between HIF1A with KRAS in PDACs (p=0.000016). We propose HIF1A as a switch to activate KRAS and degrade p53 under hypoxic conditions in PDAC proliferation. Thus, modulating the HIF1A switch may be an important mechanism to reduce the tumor-promoting microenvironment and inhibit cancer growth. Citation Format: Kevin J. Tu, Sanjit K. Roy, Binny Bhandary, Amit Sawant, Hem D. Shukla. Loss of HIF1A decreases resistance to radiation and invasiveness in pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the AACR Virtual Special Conference on Pancreatic Cancer; 2021 Sep 29-30. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2021;81(22 Suppl):Abstract nr PO-126.

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