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Thymidylate synthase accelerates Men1-mediated pancreatic tumor progression and reduces survival
Vinod Vijayakurup, Kyungah Maeng, Hye Seung Lee, Benjamin Meyer, Sandra Burkett, Akbar Nawab, Michael W. Dougherty, Christian Jobin, Iqbal Mahmud, Timothy J. Garrett, Michael Feely, Kyoung Bun Lee, Frederic J. Kaye, Maria V. Guijarro, Maria Zajac-Kaye
Vinod Vijayakurup, Kyungah Maeng, Hye Seung Lee, Benjamin Meyer, Sandra Burkett, Akbar Nawab, Michael W. Dougherty, Christian Jobin, Iqbal Mahmud, Timothy J. Garrett, Michael Feely, Kyoung Bun Lee, Frederic J. Kaye, Maria V. Guijarro, Maria Zajac-Kaye
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Research Article Oncology

Thymidylate synthase accelerates Men1-mediated pancreatic tumor progression and reduces survival

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Abstract

Clinical studies of cancer patients have shown that overexpression or amplification of thymidylate synthase (TS) correlates with a worse clinical outcome. We previously showed that elevated TS exhibits properties of an oncogene and promotes pancreatic neuroendocrine tumors (PanNETs) with a long latency. To study the causal impact of elevated TS levels in PanNETs, we generated a mouse model with elevated human TS (hTS) and conditional inactivation of the Men1 gene in pancreatic islet cells (hTS/Men1–/–). We demonstrated that increased hTS expression was associated with earlier tumor onset and accelerated PanNET development in comparison with control Men1–/– and Men1+/ΔN3-8 mice. We also observed a decrease in overall survival of hTS/Men1+/– and hTS/Men1–/– mice as compared with control mice. We showed that elevated hTS in Men1-deleted tumor cells enhanced cell proliferation, deregulated cell cycle kinetics, and was associated with a higher frequency of somatic mutations, DNA damage, and genomic instability. In addition, we analyzed the survival of 88 patients with PanNETs and observed that high TS protein expression independently predicted worse clinical outcomes. In summary, elevated hTS directly participates in promoting PanNET tumorigenesis with reduced survival in Men1-mutant background. This work will refocus attention on new strategies to inhibit TS activity for PanNET treatment.

Authors

Vinod Vijayakurup, Kyungah Maeng, Hye Seung Lee, Benjamin Meyer, Sandra Burkett, Akbar Nawab, Michael W. Dougherty, Christian Jobin, Iqbal Mahmud, Timothy J. Garrett, Michael Feely, Kyoung Bun Lee, Frederic J. Kaye, Maria V. Guijarro, Maria Zajac-Kaye

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Figure 8

TS expression level in human PanNETs is correlated with patient outcome and survival.

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TS expression level in human PanNETs is correlated with patient outcome ...
(A) IHC staining of TS in human PanNET tissues (n = 88). Representative images from 3 different patients showing negative, weak, and strong expression of TS. Scale bars: 100 μm. (B and C) Univariate survival analysis for patients with positive (n = 18) and negative (n = 70) TS expression. Patients with positive TS biopsies had worse relapse-free survival (P < 0.001) and disease-specific survival (P = 0.049) than those with negative TS expression. (D and E) Percentage of cells expressing Ki-67 and γ-H2AX in human PanNET samples with and without detectable TS expression as measured by IHC. Significance was calculated by 2-tailed Student’s t test (P = 0.025 for Ki-67 and P = 0.071 for γ-H2AX); data represent mean ± SD.

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