AI Article Synopsis

  • Pancreatic tumors have a poor prognosis, with overexpression of proteins like MET and PAX6 linked to their malignancy.
  • The study reveals that PAX6(5a), a variant of the PAX6 protein, is more abundant in pancreatic cancer cell lines than the regular PAX6 protein.
  • Inhibiting PAX6 leads to reduced cell growth, survival, and MET expression, suggesting that PAX6 activates the MET receptor, which contributes to tumor progression and metastasis.

Article Abstract

Tumors of the exocrine pancreas have a poor prognosis. Several proteins are overexpressed in this cancer type, including the MET tyrosine kinase receptor and the transcription factor PAX6. In this report, we find that PAX6(5a), an alternately spliced variant form of PAX6, is expressed in pancreatic carcinoma cell lines at higher levels than the canonical PAX6 protein. Both protein forms of PAX6 bind directly to an enhancer element in the MET promoter and activate the expression of the MET gene. In addition, inhibition of PAX6 transcripts leads to a decline in cell growth and survival, differentiation, and a concurrent reduction of MET protein expression. These data support a model for a neoplastic pathway, where expression of a transcription factor from development activates the MET receptor, a protein that has been directly linked to protumorigenic processes of resisting apoptosis, tumor growth, invasion, and metastasis.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2785681PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M109.047209DOI Listing

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