Abstract

In recent years, the deoxycytidine analogue gemcitabine (2′,2′,-difluorodeoxycytidine) has become the first-line chemotherapeutic agent for patients with pancreatic cancer. However, due to the intrinsic resistance of pancreatic cancer cells, gemcitabine-based chemotherapy yields limited disease control, with >85% disease progression at 6 months from diagnosis. Therefore, elucidating the mechanisms of chemoresistance is a critical step in improving cancer therapy, especially for the treatment of pancreatic cancer. We show PROM2, a transmembrane glycoprotein, is ubiquitously upregulated in pancreatic cancer cell. We also found higher PROM2 expression is associated with shortened overall and disease-free survival times in patients diagnosed with pancreatic cancer. We provide evidence that PROM2 promotes chemoresistance to gemcitabine both in vivo and in vitro. Mechanistically, we demonstrate that PROM2 could directly interacted with Akt and activates the Akt signaling pathway, which thus inhibiting gemcitabine-induced apoptosis. As further evidence, we show PROM2 expression and Akt phosphorylation both promote gemcitabine chemoresistance, and cause poorer survival in clinical samples with pancreatic cancer. Combining gemcitabine with the Akt inhibitor MK-2206 facilitated significant tumor shrinkage and dramatically elevated the survival status in mice xenografted with pancreatic cancer cells. Our findings not only establish PROM2 as a novel positive regulator of the Akt signaling pathway and a candidate prognostic indicator of gemcitabine response, but also provide a neo-therapeutic approach for patients resistant to gemcitabine treatment.

Highlights

  • Pancreatic cancer ranks as the fourth leading cause of cancer-related death worldwide[1] with a dismal 5-year survival rate of

  • We found that higher expression of PROM2 predicted shorter overall survival and diseasefree survival in the Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) dataset (P < 0.001; P < 0.001; n = 162, Fig. 1b)

  • Both the mRNA and protein expression level of PROM2 were markedly increased in pancreatic cancer cell lines compared with immortal pancreatic ductal epithelial cell (HPDECs) (Fig. 1c and Supplementary Fig. S1a)

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Summary

Introduction

Pancreatic cancer ranks as the fourth leading cause of cancer-related death worldwide[1] with a dismal 5-year survival rate of

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