4.8 Editorial Material

Autophagy in pancreatic cancer An emerging mechanism of cell death

Journal

AUTOPHAGY
Volume 6, Issue 7, Pages 997-998

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.4161/auto.6.7.13334

Keywords

pancreatic cancer; triptolide; apoptosis; caspase-3

Categories

Funding

  1. NCI NIH HHS [R21 CA131663, CA124723, CA131663, R01 CA124723] Funding Source: Medline
  2. NATIONAL CANCER INSTITUTE [R21CA131663, R01CA124723] Funding Source: NIH RePORTER

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Pancreatic cancer, the fourth leading cause of cancer-related death in the United States, is resistant to current chemotherapies. Therefore, identification of different pathways of cell death is important to develop novel therapeutics. Our previous study has shown that triptolide, a diterpene triepoxide, inhibits the growth of pancreatic cancer cells in vitro and prevents tumor growth in vivo. However, the mechanism by which triptolide kills pancreatic cancer cells was not known, hence, this study aimed at elucidating it. Our study reveals that triptolide kills diverse types of pancreatic cancer cells by two different pathways; it induces caspase-dependent apoptotic death in some cell lines and death via a caspase-independent autophagic pathway in the other cell lines tested. Triptolide-induced autophagy requires autophagy-specific genes, atg5 or beclin I and its inhibition results in cell death via the apoptotic pathway, whereas inhibition of both autophagy and apoptosis rescues triptolide-mediated cell death. Our study shows for the first time that induction of autophagy by triptolide has a pro-death role in pancreatic cancer cells. Since triptolide kills diverse pancreatic cancer cells by different mechanisms, it makes an attractive chemotherapeutic agent for future use against a broad spectrum of pancreatic cancers.

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