4.7 Article

Heparanase contributes to pancreatic carcinoma progression through insulin-dependent glucose uptake

Journal

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fcell.2023.1287084

Keywords

pancreatic cancer; heparanase; diabetes; gemcitabine; glucose uptake

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Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) is a highly aggressive and treatment-resistant tumor with a very low survival rate. The unique pathophysiological features of PDAC, such as dense extracellular matrix and diabetic conditions, contribute to its poor prognosis. This study discovered that elevated levels of heparanase, an enzyme that degrades glycosaminoglycan in the extracellular matrix, in combination with diabetic conditions, promote the growth and chemotherapy resistance of pancreatic carcinoma by enhancing insulin receptor signaling and glucose uptake into tumor cells.
Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) is an aggressive tumor, which is highly resistant to existing therapies and characterized by one of the lowest survival rates known for solid cancers. Among the reasons for this poor prognosis are unique pathophysiological features of PDAC, such as dense extracellular matrix [ECM] creating barriers to drug delivery, as well as systemically-deregulated glucose metabolism manifested by diabetic conditions (i.e., hyperinsulinemia/hyperglycemia) occurring in the majority of PDAC patients. Moreover, in addition to systemically deregulated glucose homeostasis, intracellular metabolic pathways in PDAC are rewired toward increased glucose uptake/anabolic metabolism by the tumor cells. While the role of oncogene-driven programs in governing these processes is actively studied, mechanisms linking metabolic dysregulation and ECM enzymatic remodeling to PDAC progression/therapy resistance are less appreciated. The aim of the current study was to investigate the action of heparanase (the predominant mammalian enzyme that degrades heparan sulfate glycosaminoglycan in the ECM), as a molecular link between the diabetic state and the intracellular metabolic rewiring in PDAC pathogenesis. Here we show that in PDAC elevated levels of heparanase, coupled with diabetic conditions typical for PDAC patients, promote growth and chemotherapy resistance of pancreatic carcinoma by favoring insulin receptor signaling and GLUT4-mediated glucose uptake into tumor cells. Collectively, our findings underscore previously unknown mechanism through which heparanase acts at the interface of systemic and intracellular metabolic alterations in PDAC and attest the enzyme as an important and potentially modifiable contributor to the chemo-resistance of pancreatic tumors.

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