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Immunohistochemical analysis of changes in signaling pathway activation downstream of growth factor receptors in pancreatic duct cell carcinogenesis.

Authors :
Pham NA
Schwock J
Iakovlev V
Pond G
Hedley DW
Tsao MS
Pham, Nhu-An
Schwock, Joerg
Iakovlev, Vladimir
Pond, Greg
Hedley, David W
Tsao, Ming-Sound
Source :
BMC Cancer; 2008, Vol. 8, p43-43, 1p
Publication Year :
2008

Abstract

<bold>Background: </bold>The pathogenesis of pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) involves multi-stage development of molecular aberrations affecting signaling pathways that regulate cancer growth and progression. This study was performed to gain a better understanding of the abnormal signaling that occurs in PDAC compared with normal duct epithelia.<bold>Methods: </bold>We performed immunohistochemistry on a tissue microarray of 26 PDAC, 13 normal appearing adjacent pancreatic ductal epithelia, and 12 normal non-PDAC ducts. We compared the levels of 18 signaling proteins including growth factor receptors, tumor suppressors and 13 of their putative downstream phosphorylated (p-) signal transducers in PDAC to those in normal ductal epithelia.<bold>Results: </bold>The overall profiles of signaling protein expression levels, activation states and sub-cellular distribution in PDAC cells were distinguishable from non-neoplastic ductal epithelia. The ERK pathway activation was correlated with high levels of S2448p-mTOR (100%, p = 0.05), T389p-S6K (100%, p = 0.02 and S235/236p-S6 (86%, p = 0.005). Additionally, T389p-S6K correlated with S727p-STAT3 (86%, p = 0.005). Advanced tumors with lymph node metastasis were characterized by high levels of S276p-NFkappaB (100%, p = 0.05) and S9p-GSK3beta (100%, p = 0.05). High levels of PKBbeta/AKT2, EGFR, as well as nuclear T202/Y204p-ERK and T180/Y182p-p38 were observed in normal ducts adjacent to PDAC compared with non-cancerous pancreas.<bold>Conclusion: </bold>Multiple signaling proteins are activated in pancreatic duct cell carcinogenesis including those associated with the ERK, PKB/AKT, mTOR and STAT3 pathways. The ERK pathway activation appears also increased in duct epithelia adjacent to carcinoma, suggesting tumor micro-environmental effects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14712407
Volume :
8
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
BMC Cancer
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
105218180
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2407-8-43