ROR2 Regulates Cellular Plasticity in Pancreatic Neoplasia and Adenocarcinoma.

Simone Benitz, Alec Steep,Malak M Nasser,Jonathan Preall,Ujjwal Mukund Mahajan, Holly McQuithey,Ian Loveless, Erick T Davis,Hui-Ju Wen,Daniel W Long,Thomas Metzler, Samuel Zwernik, Michaela Louw, Donald Rempinski,Daniel J Salas-Escabillas, Sydney M Brender, Linghao Song, Ling Huang, Brian K Theisen,Zhenyu Zhang,Nina G Steele,Ivonne Regel,Filip Bednar, Howard C Crawford

Cancer discovery(2024)

Cited 0|Views10
No score
Abstract
Cellular plasticity is a hallmark of pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) starting from the conversion of normal cells into precancerous lesions, to the progression of carcinoma subtypes associated with aggressiveness and therapeutic response. We discovered that normal acinar cell differentiation, maintained by the transcription factor Pdx1, suppresses a broad gastric cell identity that is maintained in metaplasia, neoplasia, and the classical subtype of PDAC in mouse and human. We have identified the receptor tyrosine kinase Ror2 as marker of a gastric metaplasia-like identity in pancreas neoplasms. Ablation of Ror2 in a mouse model of pancreatic tumorigenesis promoted a switch to a gastric pit cell identity that largely persisted through progression to the classical subtype of PDAC. In both human and mouse pancreatic cancer, ROR2 activity continued to antagonize the gastric pit cell identity, strongly promoting an epithelial to mesenchymal transition, conferring resistance to KRAS inhibition, and vulnerability to AKT inhibition.
More
Translated text
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined