Abstract

Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) is one of the leading causes of cancer deaths due to its highly aggressive biological nature and resistance to chemotherapy. Previous studies indicate that miR-21 is an important regulator in the activation of cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs). However, whether miR-21 in CAFs would regulate PDAC’s tumor microenvironment and lead to drug resistance remain unknown. In this study, we evaluated the relationship between CAF activation, miR-21 expression, and drug resistance using tumor samples from PDAC patients. We changed the miR-21 expression level in CAFs and tested its roles in regulating the function of CAFs. In addition, we explored the roles of miR-21 in CAFs in the development of PDAC using an animal model. We found that PDAC patients who were resistant to gemcitabine treatment tended to have higher miR-21 expression and more activated CAFs. An in vitro study showed that CAFs with high miR-21 expression had elevated MMP-3, MMP-9, PDGF, and CCL-7 expression and promoted the invasion of PDAC cell lines. miR-21 overexpression also contributed to the activation of CAFs by regulating the PDCD4 gene. The in vivo study showed that upregulating miR-21 in CAFs promoted PDAC desmoplasia and increased its drug resistance to gemcitabine treatment, but downregulating miR-21 in CAFs suppressed desmoplasia and enhanced the effect of gemcitabine. We concluded that miR-21 promoted the activation of CAFs and contributed to the drug resistance of PDAC.

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