AI Article Synopsis

  • Pancreatic adenocarcinoma (PA) has a very low 5-year survival rate of less than 5%, and existing treatments are minimally effective, with WNT/β-catenin signaling identified as a key pathway often mutated in PA.
  • Researchers created human PA cell lines lacking β-catenin through targeted genetic modification and found that these cells maintained normal growth and survival without significant changes in their overall morphology.
  • Although the absence of β-catenin was noted, there were downregulations in proteins related to cell adhesion, while plakoglobin levels increased; targeting plakoglobin led to impaired cell contacts and altered E-cadherin localization, indicating plakoglobin's role in maintaining cell adhesion in the absence of β-catenin

Article Abstract

Pancreatic adenocarcinoma (PA) is among the most aggressive human tumors with an overall 5-year survival rate of <5% and available treatments are only minimal effective. WNT/β-catenin signaling has been identified as one of 12 core signaling pathways that are commonly mutated in PA. To obtain more insight into the role of WNT/β-catenin signaling in PA we established human PA cell lines that are deficient of the central canonical WNT signaling protein β-catenin by using zinc-finger nuclease (ZFN) mediated targeted genomic disruption in the β-catenin gene (CTNNB1). Five individual CTNNB1 gene disrupted clones (BxPC3ΔCTNNB1) were established from a BxPC-3 founder cell line. Despite the complete absence of β-catenin, all clones displayed normal cell cycle distribution profiles, overall normal morphology and no elevated levels of apoptosis although increased doubling times were observed in three of the five BxPC3ΔCTNNB1 clones. This confirms that WNT/β-catenin signaling is not mandatory for long term cell growth and survival in BxPC-3 cells. Despite a normal morphology of the β-catenin deficient cell lines, quantitative proteomic analysis combined with pathway analysis showed a significant down regulation of proteins implied in cell adhesion combined with an up-regulation of plakoglobin. Treatment of BxPC3ΔCTNNB1 cell lines with siRNA for plakoglobin induced morphological changes compatible with a deficiency in the formation of functional cell to cell contacts. In addition, a re-localization of E-cadherin from membranous in untreated to accumulation in cytoplasmatic puncta in plakoglobin siRNA treated BxPC3ΔCTNNB1 cells was observed. In conclusion we describe in β-catenin deficient BxPC-3 cells a rescue function for plakoglobin on cell to cell contacts and maintaining the localization of E-cadherin at the cellular surface, but not on canonical WNT signaling as measured by TFC/LEF mediated transcription.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4275244PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0115496PLOS

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