Abstract

The hepatocyte growth factor (HGF) and its receptor, c-Met, have been implicated in driving proliferation, invasion, and poor prognosis in pancreatic cancer. Here, we investigated the expression of HGF and c-Met in primary pancreatic cancers and described in vitro and in vivo models in which MetMAb, a monovalent antibody against c-Met, was evaluated. First, expression of HGF and MET mRNA was analyzed in 59 primary pancreatic cancers and 51 normal samples, showing that both factors are highly expressed in pancreatic cancer. We next examined HGF responsiveness in pancreatic cancer lines to select lines that proliferate in response to HGF. Based on these studies, two lines were selected for further in vivo model development: BxPC-3 (c-Met(+), HGF(-)) and KP4 (c-Met(+), HGF(+)) cells. As BxPC-3 cells are responsive to exogenous HGF, s.c. tumor xenografts were grown in a paracrine manner with purified human HGF provided by osmotic pumps, wherein MetMAb treatment significantly inhibited tumor growth. KP4 cells are autocrine for HGF and c-Met, and MetMAb strongly inhibited s.c. tumor growth. To better model pancreatic cancer and to enable long-term survival studies, an orthotopic model of KP4 was established. MetMAb significantly inhibited orthotopic KP4 tumor growth in 4-week studies monitored by ultrasound and also improved survival in 90-day studies. MetMAb significantly reduced c-Met phosphorylation in orthotopic KP4 tumors with a concomitant decrease in Ki-67 staining. These data suggest that the HGF/c-Met axis plays an important role in the progression of pancreatic cancer and that targeting c-Met therein may have therapeutic value.

Highlights

  • Pancreatic cancer is a highly lethal disease with a rising incidence [1]

  • We have developed MetMAb, a monovalent monoclonal antibody against c-Met, which blocks hepatocyte growth factor (HGF) binding to c-Met and subsequent pathway activation

  • We describe the development of two novel HGF-driven s.c. pancreatic xenograft models: a BxPC-3 paracrine-driven model using osmotic pumps to provide exogenous human HGF and a KP4 autocrine-driven model, both of which showed responses to MetMAb

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Summary

Introduction

Pancreatic cancer is a highly lethal disease with a rising incidence [1]. Over 200,000 people die annually of pancreatic cancer, making it the fourth leading cause of cancer death in the United States [2, 3]. Prognosis has not been improved substantially over the past few decades and 5-year survival rates remain

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