Abstract

BackgroundRecent cancer studies revealed, the interaction between pancreatic cancer cells and pancreatic stellate cells is of importance in the cancer progression. The activation of stellate cells is mediated by some growth factors and cytokines secreted by the cancer cells. In turn, the activated stellate cells will synthesize and secrete multiple growth factors to continuously stimulate the growth of surrounding cancer cells through paracrine pathways. The mechanism behind the evolution of stellate cells from quiescent state to a cancer-associated phenotype is still not well understood.ResultsTo systematically investigate the interaction between cancer cells and stellate cells, we constructed a multicellular discrete value model, which is composed of several intracellular and intercellular signaling pathways that are frequently mutated in the pancreatic cancer, to study the cell cycle progression and angiogenesis. We, then, introduced and applied a formal verification technique, Symbolic Model Checking, to automatically analyze the cells' proliferation, angiogenesis and apoptosis in the proposed signal transduction model of tumor microenvironment.ConclusionsOur studies predicted some important temporal logic properties and dynamic behaviors in the pancreatic cancer cells and stellate cells. The verification technique identified several signaling components, including the RAS, RAGE, AKT, IKK, DVL, RB and PTEN, whose mutation or loss of function can promote cell growth and inhibit apoptosis, some of which have been confirmed by existing experiments. Our formal studies demonstrated that, the bidirectional interaction between cancer cells and stellate cells could significantly increase cell proliferation, inhibit apoptosis, induce tumor angiogenesis, and promote cancer metastasis.

Highlights

  • Recent cancer studies revealed, the interaction between pancreatic cancer cells and pancreatic stellate cells is of importance in the cancer progression

  • Many growth factors and cytokines, for example, insulin growth factor (IGF)/Insulin, Hedgehog, WNT and Advanced Glycation End products (AGEs), can stimulate the growth of cancer cell and secretion of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), which can promote the evolution of pancreatic stellate cell from quiescent state to active state, and induce angiogenesis

  • An extensive literature search was performed to help us construct a multicellular model of signaling pathways, which are composed of the Hedgehog, AGE, WNT-b-Catenin, HIF-1, RAS-ERK, RB-E2F, NFB, PI3K-P53, Insulinlike growth factor (IGF), and VEGF pathways in the pancreatic stellate cell and cancer cells

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Summary

Introduction

The interaction between pancreatic cancer cells and pancreatic stellate cells is of importance in the cancer progression. The activated stellate cells will synthesize and secrete multiple growth factors to continuously stimulate the growth of surrounding cancer cells through paracrine pathways. Recent experimental studies in pancreatic cancer [3,4,5] revealed, the interaction between pancreatic cancer cells (PCCs) and pancreatic stellate cells (PSCs, stromal cells of the pancreas) can stimulate cancer progression and tumor angiogenesis (formation of new blood vessels). The activated PSCs will synthesize and secrete multiple cytokines and growth factors, including Hedgehog and Wnt, through the paracrine and autocrine feedback loops to continuously stimulate cancer cells’ growth. These bidirectional interactions [4] will promote cancer progression and unorganized angiogenesis. To systematically understand the tumor microenvironment and the bidirectional interaction between cancer cells and stellate cells, it is imperative to investigate the intracellular and intercellular signaling pathways that regulate the cell cycle progression and angiogenesis

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