Author:
Heid Irina,Münch Corinna,Karakaya Sinan,Lueong Smiths S.,Winkelkotte Alina M.,Liffers Sven T.,Godfrey Laura,Cheung Phyllis F. Y.,Savvatakis Konstantinos,Topping Geoffrey J.,Englert Florian,Kritzner Lukas,Grashei Martin,Tannapfel Andrea,Viebahn Richard,Wolters Heiner,Uhl Waldemar,Vangala Deepak,Smeets Esther M. M.,Aarntzen Erik H. J. G.,Rauh Daniel,Weichert Wilko,Hoheisel Jörg D.,Hahn Stephan A.,Schilling Franz,Braren Rickmer,Trajkovic-Arsic Marija,Siveke Jens T.
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) lacks effective treatment options beyond chemotherapy. Although molecular subtypes such as classical and QM (quasi-mesenchymal)/basal-like with transcriptome-based distinct signatures have been identified, deduced therapeutic strategies and targets remain elusive. Gene expression data show enrichment of glycolytic genes in the more aggressive and therapy-resistant QM subtype. However, whether the glycolytic transcripts are translated into functional glycolysis that could further be explored for metabolic targeting in QM subtype is still not known.
Methods
We used different patient-derived PDAC model systems (conventional and primary patient-derived cells, patient-derived xenografts (PDX), and patient samples) and performed transcriptional and functional metabolic analysis. These included RNAseq and Illumina HT12 bead array, in vitro Seahorse metabolic flux assays and metabolic drug targeting, and in vivo hyperpolarized [1-13C]pyruvate and [1-13C]lactate magnetic resonance spectroscopy (HP-MRS) in PDAC xenografts.
Results
We found that glycolytic metabolic dependencies are not unambiguously functionally exposed in all QM PDACs. Metabolic analysis demonstrated functional metabolic heterogeneity in patient-derived primary cells and less so in conventional cell lines independent of molecular subtype. Importantly, we observed that the glycolytic product lactate is actively imported into the PDAC cells and used in mitochondrial oxidation in both classical and QM PDAC cells, although more actively in the QM cell lines. By using HP-MRS, we were able to noninvasively identify highly glycolytic PDAC xenografts by detecting the last glycolytic enzymatic step and prominent intra-tumoral [1-13C]pyruvate and [1-13C]lactate interconversion in vivo.
Conclusion
Our study adds functional metabolic phenotyping to transcriptome-based analysis and proposes a functional approach to identify highly glycolytic PDACs as candidates for antimetabolic therapeutic avenues.
Funder
SFB-Initiative 824 (collaborative research center), “Imaging for Selection, Monitoring and Individualization of Cancer Therapies”
Wilhelm-Sander Stiftung , Germany
Deutschen Konsortium für Translationale Krebsforschung
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft
Deutsche Krebshilfe
German Federal Ministry of Education and Research
DFG
Deutsches Krebsforschungszentrum (DKFZ)
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC