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Why do alterations of certain genes cause cancer only in specific organs of the human body? Scientists at the German Cancer Consortium (DKTK), the Technical University of Munich (TUM), and the University Medical Center Gottingen have now demonstrated that cells originating from different organs are differentially susceptible to activating mutations in cancer drivers. The same mutation in precursor cells of the pancreas or the bile duct leads to fundamental different outcomes (Cancer Discov 2021, doi: 10.1158/2159-8290.CD-21-0209).

  
pancreatic cancer. P... - Click to enlarge in new windowpancreatic cancer. Pancreatic cancer, induced by activation of the PIK3CA oncogene.

The team discovered for the first time that tissue-specific genetic interactions are responsible for the differential susceptibility of the biliary and the pancreatic epithelium towards transformation by oncogenes. The new findings could guide more precise therapeutic decision-making in the future.

 

There have been no major improvements in the treatment of pancreatic and biliary tract cancer in the last decades and no effective targeted therapies are available to date.

 

"The situation for patients with pancreatic and extrahepatic bile duct cancer is still very depressing, with approximately only 10 percent of patients surviving 5 years," noted Dieter Saur, DKTK Professor for Translational Cancer Research at TUM's university hospital Klinikum rechts der Isar, DKTK partner site Munich.

 

"To discover novel therapeutic strategies that improve prognosis of these patients, it is essential to understand the fundamental genetic networks and interactions that drive these tumors in a tissue-specific fashion. This will allow highly precise molecular interventions in future."

 

The research team looked at the development of biliary tract and pancreatic cancer in mice, replacing the normal oncogenes PIK3CA and KRAS with a version containing a mutation identical with that in human cancers. Expression of these oncogenes in the common precursor cells of the extrahepatic bile duct and the pancreas led to very different outcomes. Mice with the mutated PI3K gene developed mostly biliary tract cancer, while mice with the mutated KRAS gene instead developed exclusively pancreatic cancer.

 

This was unexpected because both genes are mutated in both human cancer types. Subsequent analyses discovered the fundamental genetic processes underlying the differential sensitivity of the different tissue types towards oncogenic transformation.

 

"Our results are an important step toward solving one of the biggest mysteries in oncology: Why do alterations of certain genes cause cancer only in specific organs?" said Chiara Falcomata, the first author of the new publication. "Our studies in mice revealed how genes co-operate to cause cancer in different organs. We identified main players, the order in which they occur during tumor progression, and the molecular processes how they turn normal cells into threatening cancers. Such processes are potential targets for new treatments."

 

In the mice, the team uncovered a stepwise process of genetic alterations, which drive the development of these cancer types. Some cooperating genetic events overactivate the PI3K signaling pathway, making them cancerous. Others disrupt regulators proteins, inactivating their ability to suppress cancer progression.

 

"Understanding the genetic interactions in different cancer types will guide more precise therapeutic decision-making in the future," noted Gunter Schneider, Professor for Translational Cancer Research at the University Medical Center Gottingen. "Our ability to engineer specific genetic alterations in mice allows us to study the function of cancer genes and to model specific cancer subtypes. Such mouse models are also invaluable for testing anticancer drugs before using them in clinical trials."

 

"What we showed is that the function of an oncogene is different depending on the tissue type and what other genes are altered," stated Roland Rad, Professor at TUM and a DKTK researcher. "These oncogenes need to hijack the intrinsic signaling network of a specific tissue to allow cancer development. Interestingly, such networks exist only in specific tissue types, making them susceptible for cancer development."

 

These findings have important implications for therapeutic interventions. "The concept that multiple tissue-specific genetic interactions drive cancer progression demonstrates that no single gene can predict responsiveness of a cancer to a particular therapy," Saur stated. "In the future, it is key to mechanistically understand the tissue-specific determinants of therapeutic response and resistance to get precision medicine to the next level."

 

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