Tumor Explants Elucidate a Cascade of Paracrine SHH, WNT, and VEGF Signals Driving Pancreatic Cancer Angiosuppression

Marie C. Hasselluhn(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Amanda R. Decker-Farrell(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Lukas Vlahos(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Dafydd H. Thomas(Soligenix (United States)), Álvaro Curiel‐García(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), H. Carlo Maurer(TUM Klinikum), Urszula N. Wasko(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Lorenzo Tomassoni(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Stephen A. Sastra(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Carmine F. Palermo(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Tanner C. Dalton(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Alice Ma(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Fangda Li(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Ezequiel J. Tolosa(Mayo Clinic), Hanina Hibshoosh(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Martín E. Fernández-Zapico(Mayo Clinic), Alexander Muir(May Institute), Andrea Califano(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Kenneth P. Olive(Columbia University Irving Medical Center)
Cancer Discovery
November 14, 2023
Cited by 20Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

The sparse vascularity of pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) presents a mystery: What prevents this aggressive malignancy from undergoing neoangiogenesis to counteract hypoxia and better support growth? An incidental finding from prior work on paracrine communication between malignant PDAC cells and fibroblasts revealed that inhibition of the Hedgehog (HH) pathway partially relieved angiosuppression, increasing tumor vascularity through unknown mechanisms. Initial efforts to study this phenotype were hindered by difficulties replicating the complex interactions of multiple cell types in vitro. Here we identify a cascade of paracrine signals between multiple cell types that act sequentially to suppress angiogenesis in PDAC. Malignant epithelial cells promote HH signaling in fibroblasts, leading to inhibition of noncanonical WNT signaling in fibroblasts and epithelial cells, thereby limiting VEGFR2-dependent activation of endothelial hypersprouting. This cascade was elucidated using human and murine PDAC explant models, which effectively retain the complex cellular interactions of native tumor tissues. SIGNIFICANCE: We present a key mechanism of tumor angiosuppression, a process that sculpts the physiologic, cellular, and metabolic environment of PDAC. We further present a computational and experimental framework for the dissection of complex signaling cascades that propagate among multiple cell types in the tissue environment. This article is featured in Selected Articles from This Issue, p. 201.


Related Papers