Abstract

As one of the most aggressive malignant tumors, pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) ranks as the fourth cancer-related mortality in the world. The extremely low survival rate is closely related to early invasion and distant metastasis. However, effective target therapy for weakening its malignant behavior remains limited. Over the past decades, many proteins correlating with invasion and metastasis of PDAC have been discovered using proteomics. The discovery of these proteins gives us a deeper understanding of the invasive and migratory processes of PDAC. This review is a systemic integration of these proteomics findings over the past 10 years. The discovered proteins were typically associated with the glycolytic process, hypoxic microenvironment, post-translationalmodification, extracellular matrix, exosomes, cancer stem cells, and immune escape. Some proteins were found to have multiple functions, and, cooperation between different proteins in the invasive and metastatic processes was found. This cooperation, and not just single protein function, may play a more significant role in the poor prognosis of PDAC. Therefore, multi-target therapy against these cooperative networks should be a primary choice in the future.

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