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Autophagy: A Key Player in Pancreatic Cancer Progression and a Potential Drug Target

SIMPLE SUMMARY: With the mortality rate of pancreatic cancer predicted to rise over the coming years, it is essential that effective treatment strategies are developed as soon as possible. Pancreatic cancer has always proven very difficult to treat due to its fast growing and aggressive nature. Chem...

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Autores principales: Gillson, Josef, Abd El-Aziz, Yomna S., Leck, Lionel Y. W., Jansson, Patric J., Pavlakis, Nick, Samra, Jaswinder S., Mittal, Anubhav, Sahni, Sumit
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9315706/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35884592
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers14143528
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author Gillson, Josef
Abd El-Aziz, Yomna S.
Leck, Lionel Y. W.
Jansson, Patric J.
Pavlakis, Nick
Samra, Jaswinder S.
Mittal, Anubhav
Sahni, Sumit
author_facet Gillson, Josef
Abd El-Aziz, Yomna S.
Leck, Lionel Y. W.
Jansson, Patric J.
Pavlakis, Nick
Samra, Jaswinder S.
Mittal, Anubhav
Sahni, Sumit
author_sort Gillson, Josef
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: With the mortality rate of pancreatic cancer predicted to rise over the coming years, it is essential that effective treatment strategies are developed as soon as possible. Pancreatic cancer has always proven very difficult to treat due to its fast growing and aggressive nature. Chemotherapeutic treatment has struggled to increase the survival rate of pancreatic cancer patients due to effective chemo-resistant properties that derive from the supporting tumor microenvironment and autophagy, a vital survival pathway. This review will explore how the autophagy pathway and tumor microenvironment help to sustain tumor survival under stress and expand into a metastatic state. Due to the comprehensive understanding of the autophagy pathway, we will highlight the potential chinks in the pancreatic tumor’s armor and identify potential targets to overcome chemo-resistance in pancreatic cancer. We will also present novel autophagy inhibitors that could reduce tumor survival and how they could be most effectively conceived. ABSTRACT: Pancreatic cancer is known to have the lowest survival outcomes among all major cancers, and unfortunately, this has only been marginally improved over last four decades. The innate characteristics of pancreatic cancer include an aggressive and fast-growing nature from powerful driver mutations, a highly defensive tumor microenvironment and the upregulation of advantageous survival pathways such as autophagy. Autophagy involves targeted degradation of proteins and organelles to provide a secondary source of cellular supplies to maintain cell growth. Elevated autophagic activity in pancreatic cancer is recognized as a major survival pathway as it provides a plethora of support for tumors by supplying vital resources, maintaining tumour survival under the stressful microenvironment and promoting other pathways involved in tumour progression and metastasis. The combination of these features is unique to pancreatic cancer and present significant resistance to chemotherapeutic strategies, thus, indicating a need for further investigation into therapies targeting this crucial pathway. This review will outline the autophagy pathway and its regulation, in addition to the genetic landscape and tumor microenvironment that contribute to pancreatic cancer severity. Moreover, this review will also discuss the mechanisms of novel therapeutic strategies that inhibit autophagy and how they could be used to suppress tumor progression.
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spelling pubmed-93157062022-07-27 Autophagy: A Key Player in Pancreatic Cancer Progression and a Potential Drug Target Gillson, Josef Abd El-Aziz, Yomna S. Leck, Lionel Y. W. Jansson, Patric J. Pavlakis, Nick Samra, Jaswinder S. Mittal, Anubhav Sahni, Sumit Cancers (Basel) Review SIMPLE SUMMARY: With the mortality rate of pancreatic cancer predicted to rise over the coming years, it is essential that effective treatment strategies are developed as soon as possible. Pancreatic cancer has always proven very difficult to treat due to its fast growing and aggressive nature. Chemotherapeutic treatment has struggled to increase the survival rate of pancreatic cancer patients due to effective chemo-resistant properties that derive from the supporting tumor microenvironment and autophagy, a vital survival pathway. This review will explore how the autophagy pathway and tumor microenvironment help to sustain tumor survival under stress and expand into a metastatic state. Due to the comprehensive understanding of the autophagy pathway, we will highlight the potential chinks in the pancreatic tumor’s armor and identify potential targets to overcome chemo-resistance in pancreatic cancer. We will also present novel autophagy inhibitors that could reduce tumor survival and how they could be most effectively conceived. ABSTRACT: Pancreatic cancer is known to have the lowest survival outcomes among all major cancers, and unfortunately, this has only been marginally improved over last four decades. The innate characteristics of pancreatic cancer include an aggressive and fast-growing nature from powerful driver mutations, a highly defensive tumor microenvironment and the upregulation of advantageous survival pathways such as autophagy. Autophagy involves targeted degradation of proteins and organelles to provide a secondary source of cellular supplies to maintain cell growth. Elevated autophagic activity in pancreatic cancer is recognized as a major survival pathway as it provides a plethora of support for tumors by supplying vital resources, maintaining tumour survival under the stressful microenvironment and promoting other pathways involved in tumour progression and metastasis. The combination of these features is unique to pancreatic cancer and present significant resistance to chemotherapeutic strategies, thus, indicating a need for further investigation into therapies targeting this crucial pathway. This review will outline the autophagy pathway and its regulation, in addition to the genetic landscape and tumor microenvironment that contribute to pancreatic cancer severity. Moreover, this review will also discuss the mechanisms of novel therapeutic strategies that inhibit autophagy and how they could be used to suppress tumor progression. MDPI 2022-07-20 /pmc/articles/PMC9315706/ /pubmed/35884592 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers14143528 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 Review
Gillson, Josef
Abd El-Aziz, Yomna S.
Leck, Lionel Y. W.
Jansson, Patric J.
Pavlakis, Nick
Samra, Jaswinder S.
Mittal, Anubhav
Sahni, Sumit
Autophagy: A Key Player in Pancreatic Cancer Progression and a Potential Drug Target
title Autophagy: A Key Player in Pancreatic Cancer Progression and a Potential Drug Target
title_full Autophagy: A Key Player in Pancreatic Cancer Progression and a Potential Drug Target
title_fullStr Autophagy: A Key Player in Pancreatic Cancer Progression and a Potential Drug Target
title_full_unstemmed Autophagy: A Key Player in Pancreatic Cancer Progression and a Potential Drug Target
title_short Autophagy: A Key Player in Pancreatic Cancer Progression and a Potential Drug Target
title_sort autophagy: a key player in pancreatic cancer progression and a potential drug target
topic Review
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9315706/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35884592
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers14143528
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