CD73 controls Myosin II-driven invasion, metastasis, and immunosuppression in amoeboid pancreatic cancer cells
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Samain, Remi; Maiques, Oscar; Monger, Joanne; Lam, Hoyin; Cándido, Juliana; George, Samantha; Ferrari, Nicola; Kohlhammer, Leonie; Lunetto, Sophia; Varela, Adrián; Orgaz, José L.; Vilardell, Felip; Olsina, Jorge Juan; Matias-Guiu, Xavier; Sarker, Debashis; Biddle, Adrian; Balkwill, Frances R.; Eyles, Jim; Calvo González, FernandoFecha
2023Derechos
Attribution 4.0 International
© 2023 The Authors, some rights reserved; exclusive licensee American Association for the Advancement of Science. No claim to original U.S. Government Works
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Science Advances, 2023, 9, eadi0244
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American Association for the Advancement of Science
Resumen/Abstract
Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) has a very poor prognosis because of its high propensity to metastasize and its immunosuppressive microenvironment. Using a panel of pancreatic cancer cell lines, three-dimensional (3D) invasion systems, microarray gene signatures, microfluidic devices, mouse models, and intravital imaging, we demonstrate that ROCK-Myosin II activity in PDAC cells supports a transcriptional program conferring amoeboid invasive and immunosuppressive traits and in vivo metastatic abilities. Moreover, we find that immune checkpoint CD73 is highly expressed in amoeboid PDAC cells and drives their invasive, metastatic, and immunomodulatory traits. Mechanistically, CD73 activates RhoA-ROCK-Myosin II downstream of PI3K. Tissue microarrays of human PDAC biopsies combined with bioinformatic analysis reveal that rounded-amoeboid invasive cells with high CD73-ROCK-Myosin II activity and their immunosuppressive microenvironment confer poor prognosis to patients. We propose targeting amoeboid PDAC cells as a therapeutic strategy.
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