4.7 Article

ERK-mediated transcriptional activation of Dicer is involved in gemcitabine resistance of pancreatic cancer

Journal

JOURNAL OF CELLULAR PHYSIOLOGY
Volume 236, Issue 6, Pages 4420-4434

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/jcp.30159

Keywords

Dicer; ERK; gemcitabine resistance; pancreatic cancer; Sp1

Funding

  1. Taipei Medical University [104TMU-SHH-01-3, TMU106-AE1-B38]
  2. China Medical University, Taiwan [CMU108-S-13]
  3. Ministry of Science and Technology, Taiwan [104-2321-B-038-012-MY3, 107-2320-B-038-065, 108-2320-B-038015, 109-2314-B-866-001-MY3]

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Research has found that increased Dicer levels may be associated with gemcitabine resistance in pancreatic cancer, with Dicer suppression reducing resistance and overexpression increasing it. The ERK/Sp1 signaling pathway may regulate Dicer expression, correlating positively with pancreatic cancer progression and suggesting therapeutic potential for gemcitabine-resistant cases.
Gemcitabine has been a commonly used therapeutic agent for treatment of pancreatic cancer. In the clinic, a growing resistance to gemcitabine has been observed in patients with pancreatic cancer, and investigation of the underlying mechanism of gemcitabine resistance is urgently required. The microRNA (miRNA)-producing enzyme, Dicer, is crucial for the maturation of miRNAs, and is involved in clinical aggressiveness, poor prognosis, and survival outcomes in various cancers, however, the role of Dicer in acquired gemcitabine resistance of pancreatic cancer is still not clear. Here, we found that Dicer expression was significantly increased in gemcitabine-resistant PANC-1 (PANC-1/GEM) cells compared with parental PANC-1 cells and observed a high level of Dicer correlated with increased risk of pancreatic cancer. Suppression of Dicer obviously decreased gemcitabine resistance in PANC-1/GEM cells; consistently, overexpression of Dicer in PANC-1 cells increased gemcitabine resistance. Moreover, we identified that transcriptional factor Sp1 targeted the promoter region of Dicer and found ERK/Sp1 signaling regulated Dicer expression in PANC-1/GEM cells, as well as positively correlated with pancreatic cancer progression and suggest that targeting the ERK/Sp1/Dicer pathway has potential therapeutic value for pancreatic cancer with acquired resistance to gemcitabine.

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