Mucin Splice Variants in Pancreatic Cancer Diagnosis and Pathogenesis

NIH RePORTER · NIH · F31 · $39,788 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

PROJECT SUMMARY/ABSTRACT Pancreatic cancer (PC) survival rates are dismally on track to make it the second most lethal malignancy by the end of the decade. Over half of all patients are diagnosed at stage 4 disease limiting the availability and success of therapeutic intervention. In PC, presentation with advanced disease is theresult of both asymptomatic disease initiation and early metastasis. While surgical resection currently yields the best outcome, less than one quarter of patients are eligible at presentation, frequently limited by appreciable metastasis or vascular involvement. Compounding the issue of late stage diagnosis is the innate therapeutic resistance observed in PC tumors, either directly or resulting from reduced treatment delivery to tumors. PC tumors demonstrate a range of aberrant findings, including a high rate of KRAS mutations, CDKN2A deletion, and anomalous early expression of mucins. Mucins are large glycoproteins that have been demonstrated to significantly contribute to disease progression, metastasis, and drug resistance. A number of alternatively spliced mucin species have been reported, but their role in PC pathology remains elusive. Using RNA-seq data from TCGA, I discovered that select MUC1, MUC4, and MUC16 transcripts are significantly associated with survival outcome in PC patients. Of these 5 significant transcripts, a single MUC4 isoform (MUC4∆6) contains an in-frame deletion of exon 6 and has previously been found by our lab in patient tumors. Exon 6 in MUC4 corresponds to the NIDO domain and may alter interactions between the expressing cell and tumor stroma. Because of the high rate of expression, I hypothesize that this transcript serves as a prognostic molecule, detectable in patient biofluids, and contributes to metastatic behavior of PC cells. To facilitate addressing this hypothesis, I propose two independent specific aims. Aim 1 will employ a custom multiplexed assay for the detection of PC-specific RNA transcripts using gold nanoparticle-bound fluorescent oligonucleotide probes. We will demonstrate that this assay can detect the presence MUC4∆6, KRAS mutant, and CDKN2A transcripts in patient plasma with high sensitivity. Detection and quantification of target RNA transcripts using our nanoprobe-based approach requires perfect hybridization of both probe and RNA followed by subsequent enzymatic cleavage. The ultility in this novel assay technology is that it can detect down to single nucleotide mutations, permits quantification, and requires a minimal amount of blood for testing. This will be validated in orthotopic animals and PC cell lines. Aim 2 involves the generation of MUC4∆6-sparing knockdown of MUC4 using constitutively expression of shRNA in PC cell lines. These cell lines will be used for in vitro functional studies of MUC4∆6 to elucidate its role in tumor cell mobility, stromal interactions, drug resistance, and proliferative effects. Subsequently, these features will be tested in vivo usi...

Key facts

NIH application ID
9993110
Project number
5F31CA243469-02
Recipient
UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA MEDICAL CENTER
Principal Investigator
Christopher Michael Thompson
Activity code
F31
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2020
Award amount
$39,788
Award type
5
Project period
2019-07-01 → 2021-04-23