Abstract

Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) has an extremely poor five-year survival rate of less than 10%. Immune suppression along with chemoresistance are obstacles for PDAC therapeutic treatment. Innate immune cells, such as tumor-associated macrophages, are recruited to the inflammatory environment of PDAC and adversely suppress cytotoxic T lymphocytes. KRAS and MYC are important oncogenes associated with immune suppression and pose a challenge to successful therapies. Here, we targeted KRAS, through inhibition of downstream c-RAF with GW5074, and MYC expression via difluoromethylornithine (DFMO). DFMO alone and with GW5074 reduced in vitro PDAC cell viability. Both DFMO and GW5074 showed efficacy in reducing in vivo PDAC growth in an immunocompromised model. Results in immunocompetent syngeneic tumor-bearing mice showed that DFMO and combination treatment markedly decreased tumor size, but only DFMO increased survival in mice. To further investigate, immunohistochemical staining showed DFMO diminished MYC expression and increased tumor infiltration of macrophages, CD86+ cells, CD4+ and CD8+ T lymphocytes. GW5074 was not as effective in modulating the tumor infiltration of total CD3+ lymphocytes or tumor progression and maintained MYC expression. Collectively, this study highlights that in contrast to GW5074, the inhibition of MYC through DFMO may be an effective treatment modality to modulate PDAC immunosuppression.

Highlights

  • We used KRAS-driven murine PAN 02 and human L3.6pl pancreatic cancer cells to test the effectiveness of DFMO and GW5074 treatments at previously optimized concen

  • We used KRAS-driven murine PAN 02 and human L3.6pl pancreatic cancer cells to test the effectiveness of DFMO and GW5074 treatments at previously optimized concentrations [9,21,22]

  • The present study shows the effectiveness of DFMO treatment and provides supporting evidence for the importance of diminishing MYC expression to improve Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC)

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Summary

Introduction

Pancreatic cancers have a dismal five-year survival rate of less than 10% [1]. It is projected to be the second leading cause of cancer-related deaths in the US by the year 2030 [2]. Advances to increase patient survival have been difficult, in part due to the complexity of the pancreatic tumor environment among other factors [2]. Patients frequently present with advanced stage of the disease when curative surgery is typically not an option [2]

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