학술논문

Pancreatic cancer cells upregulate LPAR4 in response to isolation stress to promote an ECM-enriched niche and support tumour initiation
Document Type
article
Source
Nature Cell Biology. 25(2)
Subject
Biochemistry and Cell Biology
Biological Sciences
Pancreatic Cancer
Cancer
Rare Diseases
Digestive Diseases
Stem Cell Research
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Aetiology
Humans
Fibronectins
Pancreatic Neoplasms
Extracellular Matrix
Cell Transformation
Neoplastic
Receptors
Purinergic P2
MicroRNAs
Medical and Health Sciences
Developmental Biology
Biochemistry and cell biology
Language
Abstract
Defining drivers of tumour initiation can provide opportunities to control cancer progression. Here we report that lysophosphatidic acid receptor 4 (LPAR4) becomes transiently upregulated on pancreatic cancer cells exposed to environmental stress or chemotherapy where it promotes stress tolerance, drug resistance, self-renewal and tumour initiation. Pancreatic cancer cells gain LPAR4 expression in response to stress by downregulating a tumour suppressor, miR-139-5p. Even in the absence of exogenous lysophosphatidic acid, LPAR4-expressing tumour cells display an enrichment of extracellular matrix genes that are established drivers of cancer stemness. Mechanistically, upregulation of fibronectin via an LPAR4/AKT/CREB axis is indispensable for LPAR4-induced tumour initiation and stress tolerance. Moreover, ligation of this fibronectin-containing matrix via integrins α5β1 or αVβ3 can transfer stress tolerance to LPAR4-negative cells. Therefore, stress- or drug-induced LPAR4 enhances cell-autonomous production of a fibronectin-rich extracellular matrix, allowing cells to survive 'isolation stress' and compensate for the absence of stromal-derived factors by creating their own tumour-initiating niche.