Abstract

Pancreatic cancer remains a daunting foe despite a vast number of accumulating molecular analyses regarding the mutation and expression status of a variety of genes. Indeed, most pancreatic cancer cases uniformly present with a mutation in the KRAS allele leading to enhanced RAS activation. Yet our understanding of the many epigenetic/environmental factors contributing to disease incidence and progression is waning. Epidemiologic data suggest that diet may be a key factor in pancreatic cancer development and potentially a means of chemoprevention at earlier stages. While diets high in ω3 fatty acids are typically associated with tumor suppression, diets high in ω6 fatty acids have been linked to increased tumor development. Thus, to better understand the contribution of these polyunsaturated fatty acids to pancreatic carcinogenesis, we modeled early stage disease by targeting mutant KRAS to the exocrine pancreas and administered diets rich in these fatty acids to assess tumor formation and altered cell-signaling pathways. We discovered that, consistent with previous reports, the ω3-enriched diet led to reduced lesion penetrance via repression of proliferation associated with reduced phosphorylated AKT (pAKT), whereas the ω6-enriched diet accelerated tumor formation. These data provide a plausible mechanism underlying previously observed effects of fatty acids and suggest that administration of ω3 fatty acids can reduce the pro-survival, pro-growth functions of pAKT. Indeed, counseling subjects at risk to increase their intake of foods containing higher amounts of ω3 fatty acids could aid in the prevention of pancreatic cancer.

Highlights

  • Pancreatic cancer is a highly aggressive malignancy, with a less than 10% five-year survival rate [1]

  • Cells were treated with bovine serum albumin (BSA), to mimic the physiologic delivery system of fats in the blood), or BSA plus either Docosahexaenoic Acid (DHA), Eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA), or Linoleic acid (LA) 20–80 μM for 24–48 h

  • It has been estimated that pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) will surpass colon cancer secondleading leadingcause cause of of cancer-related cancer-related death inin thethe few years asas thethe second deathin inthe theUnited

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Summary

Introduction

Pancreatic cancer is a highly aggressive malignancy, with a less than 10% five-year survival rate [1]. Recent evidence suggests that a decade or more can pass between the initial onset of early pancreatic neoplasia and the development of malignant pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) [4]. This fact is an opportunity for earlier detection and treatment or chemoprevention of this disease in its initial stages, where the survival rate is considerably increased [5]. For PDAC, there are well known epidemiologic factors that increase the risk of the disease such as age, smoking, obesity, long-standing diabetes mellitus, and chronic pancreatitis [6] It has been described how some cancers such as PDAC are influenced by lifestyle and environmental factors [7] and that 37% of these cases may have been prevented just by modifying these risk factors. The typical Western diet, with the hallmark features of a high intake of red meat, sugar, and fat, has been linked to the onset of nearly one-third of human cancers [8,9]

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