Ligand-dependent notch signaling is involved in tumor initiation and tumor maintenance in pancreatic cancer Journal Article


Authors: Mullendore, M. E.; Koorstra, J. B.; Li, Y. M.; Offerhaus, G. J.; Fan, X.; Henderson, C. M.; Matsui, W.; Eberhart, C. G.; Maitra, A.; Feldmann, G.
Article Title: Ligand-dependent notch signaling is involved in tumor initiation and tumor maintenance in pancreatic cancer
Abstract: Purpose: Aberrant activation of the Notch signaling pathway is commonly observed in human pancreatic cancer, although the mechanism(s) for this activation has not been elucidated. Experimental Design: A panel of 20 human pancreatic cancer cell lines was profiled for the expression of Notch pathway-related ligands, receptors, and target genes. Disruption of intracellular Notch signaling, either genetically by RNA interference targeting NOTCH1 or pharmacologically by means of the g-secretase inhibitor GSI-18, was used for assessing requirement of Notch signaling in pancreatic cancer initiation and maintenance. Results: Striking overexpression of Notch ligand transcripts was detectable in the vast majority of pancreatic cancer cell lines, most prominently JAGGED2 (18 of 20 cases, 90%) and DLL4 (10 of 20 cases, 50%). In two cell lines, genomic amplification of the DLL3 locus was observed, mirrored by overexpression of DLL3 transcripts. In contrast, coding region mutations of NOTCH1 or NOTCH2 were not observed. Genetic and pharmacologic inhibition of Notch signaling mitigated anchorage-independent growth in pancreatic cancer cells, confirming that sustained Notch activation is a requirement for pancreatic cancer maintenance. Further, transient pretreatment of pancreatic cancer cells with GSI-18 resulted in depletion in the proportion of tumor-initiating aldehyde dehydrogenase-expressing subpopulation and was associated with inhibition of colony formation in vitro and xenograft engraftment in vivo, underscoring a requirement for the Notch-dependent aldehyde dehydrogenase-expressing cells in pancreatic cancer initiation. Conclusions: Our studies confirm that Notch activation is almost always ligand dependent in pancreatic cancer, and inhibition of Notch signaling is a promising therapeutic strategy in this malignancy. ©2009 American Association for Cancer Research.
Keywords: signal transduction; controlled study; intercellular signaling peptides and proteins; gene mutation; human cell; mutation; nonhuman; drug targeting; pancreas cancer; pancreatic neoplasms; cell proliferation; gene overexpression; gene amplification; gene expression profiling; membrane proteins; gene locus; rna interference; receptor, notch1; cell line, tumor; enzyme inhibitors; intracellular signaling peptides and proteins; receptors, notch; ligands; gamma secretase inhibitor; notch1 receptor; amyloid precursor protein secretases; aldehyde dehydrogenase; receptor, notch2
Journal Title: Clinical Cancer Research
Volume: 15
Issue: 7
ISSN: 1078-0432
Publisher: American Association for Cancer Research  
Date Published: 2009-04-01
Start Page: 2291
End Page: 2301
Language: English
DOI: 10.1158/1078-0432.ccr-08-2004
PUBMED: 19258443
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC2711441
DOI/URL:
Notes: --- - "Cited By (since 1996): 8" - "Export Date: 30 November 2010" - "CODEN: CCREF" - "Source: Scopus"
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  1. Yueming Li
    132 Li