Abstract

Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) relies on hyperactivated protein synthesis. Consistently, human and mouse PDAC lose expression of the translational repressor and mTOR target 4E-BP1. Using genome-wide polysome profiling, we here explore mRNAs whose translational efficiencies depend on the mTOR/4E-BP1 axis in pancreatic cancer cells. We identified a functional enrichment for mRNAs encoding DNA replication and repair proteins, including RRM2 and CDC6. Consequently, 4E-BP1 depletion favors DNA repair and renders DNA replication insensitive to mTOR inhibitors, in correlation with a sustained protein expression of CDC6 and RRM2, which is inversely correlated with 4E-BP1 expression in PDAC patient samples. DNA damage and pancreatic lesions induced by an experimental pancreatitis model uncover that 4E-BP1/2-deleted mice display an increased acinar cell proliferation and a better recovery than WT animals. Targeting translation, independently of 4E-BP1 status, using eIF4A RNA helicase inhibitors (silvestrol derivatives) selectively modulates translation and limits CDC6 expression and DNA replication, leading to reduced PDAC tumor growth. In summary, 4E-BP1 expression loss during PDAC development induces selective changes in translation of mRNA encoding DNA replication and repair protein. Importantly, targeting protein synthesis by eIF4A inhibitors circumvents PDAC resistance to mTOR inhibition.

Highlights

  • Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) remains an incurable disease

  • We observed changes in cytosolic mRNA levels (Figure 1D), we focused on translationally suppressed mRNAs, which are most likely to be directly targeted by the mTOR/4E-BP axis (Supplemental Table 1)

  • Several reports have highlighted the crucial role of translational control along PDAC development [16, 17]

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Summary

Introduction

Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) remains an incurable disease. Extensive “omics” approaches have been applied to characterize PDAC driver and passenger mutations, as well as mRNA, long noncoding RNA (lncRNA), miRNA [4, 5], and protein and epigenetic profiles. These studies led to the discovery of multiple activated pathways and ample compensatory signaling crosstalks, accounting for PDAC adaptability to the stromal environment and current therapies. The weakest point of pancreatic cancer remains to be identified, especially for improving patient therapeutic management

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