4.3 Article

Leptin-Notch signaling axis is involved in pancreatic cancer progression

Journal

ONCOTARGET
Volume 8, Issue 5, Pages 7740-7752

Publisher

IMPACT JOURNALS LLC
DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.13946

Keywords

leptin; Notch; pancreatic cancer; pancreatic cancer stem cells; leptin peptide receptor antagonist LPrA2

Funding

  1. DOD [W81XWH-13-1-0382]
  2. NIH/NCI [1R41CA183399-01A1]
  3. Pilot Project Award from MSM (Morehouse School of Medicine)/Tuskegee University/UAB Cancer Center partnership grant [5U54CA118638]
  4. PC SPORE Grant from UAB
  5. MSM grant [5S21MD00101]

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Pancreatic cancer (PC) shows a high death rate. PC incidence and prognosis are affected by obesity, a pandemic characterized by high levels of leptin. Notch is upregulated by leptin in breast cancer. Thus, leptin and Notch crosstalk could influence PC progression. Here we investigated in PC cell lines (BxPC-3, MiaPaCa-2, Panc-1, AsPC-1), derived tumorspheres and xenografts whether a functional leptin-Notch axis affects PC progression and expansion of pancreatic cancer stem cells (PCSC). PC cells and tumorspheres were treated with leptin and inhibitors of Notch (gamma-secretase inhibitor, DAPT) and leptin (iron oxide nanoparticle-leptin peptide receptor antagonist2, IONP-LPrA2). Leptin treatment increased cell cycle progression and proliferation, and the expression of Notch receptors, ligands and targeted molecules (Notch1-4, DLL4, JAG1, Survivin and Hey2), PCSC markers (CD24/CD44/ESA, ALDH, CD133, Oct-4), ABCB1 protein, as well as tumorsphere formation. Leptin-induced effects on PC and tumorspheres were decreased by IONP-LPrA2 and DAPT. PC cells secreted leptin and expressed the leptin receptor, OB-R, which indicates a leptin autocrine/paracrine signaling loop could also affect tumor progression. IONP-LPrA2 treatment delayed the onset of MiaPaCa-2 xenografts, and decreased tumor growth and the expression of proliferation and PCSC markers. Present data suggest that leptin-Notch axis is involved in PC. PC has no targeted therapy and is mainly treated with chemotherapy, whose efficiency could be decreased by leptin and Notch activities. Thus, the leptin-Notch axis could be a novel therapeutic target, particularly for obese PC patients.

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