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Sequestration of Intestinal Acidic Toxins by Cationic Resin Attenuates Pancreatic Cancer Progression through Promoting Autophagic Flux for YAP Degradation

SIMPLE SUMMARY: Annually, more than 450,000 people are diagnosed with pancreatic cancer worldwide with over 430,000 mortalities. Pancreatic ductal carcinoma (PDAC) accounts for around 80% of pancreatic cancer cases with an extremely high mortality rate. Emerging research has demonstrated that gut dy...

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Autores principales: Zhao, Guangfu, Zhang, Tianci, Liu, Wei, Edderkaoui, Mouad, Hu, Richard, Li, Jun, Pandol, Stephen J., Fu, Xiangsheng, Han, Yuan-Ping
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8946475/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35326559
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers14061407
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author Zhao, Guangfu
Zhang, Tianci
Liu, Wei
Edderkaoui, Mouad
Hu, Richard
Li, Jun
Pandol, Stephen J.
Fu, Xiangsheng
Han, Yuan-Ping
author_facet Zhao, Guangfu
Zhang, Tianci
Liu, Wei
Edderkaoui, Mouad
Hu, Richard
Li, Jun
Pandol, Stephen J.
Fu, Xiangsheng
Han, Yuan-Ping
author_sort Zhao, Guangfu
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: Annually, more than 450,000 people are diagnosed with pancreatic cancer worldwide with over 430,000 mortalities. Pancreatic ductal carcinoma (PDAC) accounts for around 80% of pancreatic cancer cases with an extremely high mortality rate. Emerging research has demonstrated that gut dysbiosis is closely associated with pancreatic cancer, while the underlying mechanisms remain elusive. In this study, we found that elevated levels of endotoxin (LPS) and bile acids were associated with malignant progression in Kras-driven pancreatic cancer mice. Importantly, oral administration of cationic resins to sequestrate intestinal endotoxins and bile acids efficiently attenuated tumor progression. Thus, sequestration of intestinal acidic toxins by oral administration of cationic resins may have potential as an intervention strategy for pancreatic malignancy. ABSTRACT: Pancreatic cancer is driven by risk factors such as diabetes and chronic pancreatic injury, which are further associated with gut dysbiosis. Intestinal toxins such as bile acids and bacterial endotoxin (LPS), in excess and persistence, can provoke chronic inflammation and tumorigenesis. Of interest is that many intestinal toxins are negatively charged acidic components in essence, which prompted us to test whether oral administration of cationic resin can deplete intestinal toxins and ameliorate pancreatic cancer. Here, we found that increased plasma levels of endotoxin and bile acids in Pdx1-Cre: LSL-Kras(G12D/+) mice were associated with the transformation of the pancreatic ductal carcinoma (PDAC) state. Common bile-duct-ligation or LPS injection impeded autolysosomal flux, leading to Yap accumulation and malignant transformation. Conversely, oral administration of cholestyramine to sequestrate intestinal endotoxin and bile acids resumed autolysosomal flux for Yap degradation and attenuated metastatic incidence. Conversely, chloroquine treatment impaired autolysosomal flux and exacerbated malignance, showing jeopardization of p62/ Sqxtm1 turnover, leading to Yap accumulation, which is also consistent with overexpression of cystatin A (CSTA) in situ with pancreatic cancer cells and metastatic tumor. At cellular levels, chenodeoxycholic acid or LPS treatment activated the ligand–receptor-mediated AKT-mTOR pathway, resulting in autophagy-lysosomal stress for YAP accumulation and cellular dissemination. Thus, this work indicates a potential new strategy for intervention of pancreatic metastasis through sequestration of intestinal acidic toxins by oral administration of cationic resins.
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spelling pubmed-89464752022-03-25 Sequestration of Intestinal Acidic Toxins by Cationic Resin Attenuates Pancreatic Cancer Progression through Promoting Autophagic Flux for YAP Degradation Zhao, Guangfu Zhang, Tianci Liu, Wei Edderkaoui, Mouad Hu, Richard Li, Jun Pandol, Stephen J. Fu, Xiangsheng Han, Yuan-Ping Cancers (Basel) Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: Annually, more than 450,000 people are diagnosed with pancreatic cancer worldwide with over 430,000 mortalities. Pancreatic ductal carcinoma (PDAC) accounts for around 80% of pancreatic cancer cases with an extremely high mortality rate. Emerging research has demonstrated that gut dysbiosis is closely associated with pancreatic cancer, while the underlying mechanisms remain elusive. In this study, we found that elevated levels of endotoxin (LPS) and bile acids were associated with malignant progression in Kras-driven pancreatic cancer mice. Importantly, oral administration of cationic resins to sequestrate intestinal endotoxins and bile acids efficiently attenuated tumor progression. Thus, sequestration of intestinal acidic toxins by oral administration of cationic resins may have potential as an intervention strategy for pancreatic malignancy. ABSTRACT: Pancreatic cancer is driven by risk factors such as diabetes and chronic pancreatic injury, which are further associated with gut dysbiosis. Intestinal toxins such as bile acids and bacterial endotoxin (LPS), in excess and persistence, can provoke chronic inflammation and tumorigenesis. Of interest is that many intestinal toxins are negatively charged acidic components in essence, which prompted us to test whether oral administration of cationic resin can deplete intestinal toxins and ameliorate pancreatic cancer. Here, we found that increased plasma levels of endotoxin and bile acids in Pdx1-Cre: LSL-Kras(G12D/+) mice were associated with the transformation of the pancreatic ductal carcinoma (PDAC) state. Common bile-duct-ligation or LPS injection impeded autolysosomal flux, leading to Yap accumulation and malignant transformation. Conversely, oral administration of cholestyramine to sequestrate intestinal endotoxin and bile acids resumed autolysosomal flux for Yap degradation and attenuated metastatic incidence. Conversely, chloroquine treatment impaired autolysosomal flux and exacerbated malignance, showing jeopardization of p62/ Sqxtm1 turnover, leading to Yap accumulation, which is also consistent with overexpression of cystatin A (CSTA) in situ with pancreatic cancer cells and metastatic tumor. At cellular levels, chenodeoxycholic acid or LPS treatment activated the ligand–receptor-mediated AKT-mTOR pathway, resulting in autophagy-lysosomal stress for YAP accumulation and cellular dissemination. Thus, this work indicates a potential new strategy for intervention of pancreatic metastasis through sequestration of intestinal acidic toxins by oral administration of cationic resins. MDPI 2022-03-10 /pmc/articles/PMC8946475/ /pubmed/35326559 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers14061407 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Zhao, Guangfu
Zhang, Tianci
Liu, Wei
Edderkaoui, Mouad
Hu, Richard
Li, Jun
Pandol, Stephen J.
Fu, Xiangsheng
Han, Yuan-Ping
Sequestration of Intestinal Acidic Toxins by Cationic Resin Attenuates Pancreatic Cancer Progression through Promoting Autophagic Flux for YAP Degradation
title Sequestration of Intestinal Acidic Toxins by Cationic Resin Attenuates Pancreatic Cancer Progression through Promoting Autophagic Flux for YAP Degradation
title_full Sequestration of Intestinal Acidic Toxins by Cationic Resin Attenuates Pancreatic Cancer Progression through Promoting Autophagic Flux for YAP Degradation
title_fullStr Sequestration of Intestinal Acidic Toxins by Cationic Resin Attenuates Pancreatic Cancer Progression through Promoting Autophagic Flux for YAP Degradation
title_full_unstemmed Sequestration of Intestinal Acidic Toxins by Cationic Resin Attenuates Pancreatic Cancer Progression through Promoting Autophagic Flux for YAP Degradation
title_short Sequestration of Intestinal Acidic Toxins by Cationic Resin Attenuates Pancreatic Cancer Progression through Promoting Autophagic Flux for YAP Degradation
title_sort sequestration of intestinal acidic toxins by cationic resin attenuates pancreatic cancer progression through promoting autophagic flux for yap degradation
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8946475/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35326559
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers14061407
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