Cholinergic Signaling via Muscarinic Receptors Directly and Indirectly Suppresses Pancreatic Tumorigenesis and Cancer Stemness
Renz, B. W., Tanaka, T., Sunagawa, M., Takahashi, R., Jiang, Z., Macchini, M., Dantes, Z., Valenti, G., White, R. A., Middelhoff, M. A., Ilmer, M., Oberstein, P. E., Angele, M. K., Deng, H., Hayakawa, Y., Westphalen, C. B., Werner, J., Remotti, H., Reichert, M., Tailor, Y. H., Nagar, K., Friedman, R. A., Iuga, A. C., Olive, K. P., and Wang, T. C. (2018). Cancer Discov 8, 1458-1473. doi: 10.1158/2159-8290.CD-18-0046
Abstract:
In many solid tumors, parasympathetic input is provided by the vagus nerve, which has been shown to modulate tumor growth. However, whether
cholinergic signaling directly regulates progression of
pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) has not been defined. Here, we found that subdiaphragmatic vagotomy in LSL-
Kras +/G12D;
Pdx1-Cre (KC) mice accelerated PDAC development, whereas treatment with the systemic
muscarinic agonist bethanechol restored the normal KC phenotype, thereby suppressing the accelerated
tumorigenesis caused by vagotomy. In LSL-
Kras +/G12D;LSL-
Trp53 +/R172H;
Pdx1-Cre mice with established PDAC, bethanechol significantly extended survival. These effects were mediated in part through CHRM1, which inhibited downstream MAPK/EGFR and PI3K/AKT pathways in PDAC cells. Enhanced
cholinergic signaling led to a suppression of the
cancer stem cell (CSC) compartment, CD11b
+ myeloid cells, TNFα levels, and metastatic growth in the liver. Therefore, these data suggest that
cholinergic signaling directly and
indirectly suppresses growth of PDAC cells, and therapies that stimulate
muscarinic receptors may be useful in the treatment of PDAC.
Significance: Subdiaphragmatic vagotomy or
Chrm1 knockout accelerates
pancreatic tumorigenesis, in part
via expansion of the CSC compartment. Systemic administration of a
muscarinic agonist
suppresses tumorigenesis through MAPK and PI3K/AKT
signaling, in early stages of tumor growth and in more advanced, metastatic disease. Therefore, CHRM1 may represent a potentially attractive therapeutic target.