Altered gene expression along the glycolysis–cholesterol synthesis axis is associated with outcome in pancreatic cancer

JM Karasinska, JT Topham, SE Kalloger, GH Jang… - Clinical Cancer …, 2020 - AACR
JM Karasinska, JT Topham, SE Kalloger, GH Jang, RE Denroche, L Culibrk, LM Williamson…
Clinical Cancer Research, 2020AACR
Purpose: Identification of clinically actionable molecular subtypes of pancreatic ductal
adenocarcinoma (PDAC) is key to improving patient outcome. Intertumoral metabolic
heterogeneity contributes to cancer survival and the balance between distinct metabolic
pathways may influence PDAC outcome. We hypothesized that PDAC can be stratified into
prognostic metabolic subgroups based on alterations in the expression of genes involved in
glycolysis and cholesterol synthesis. Experimental Design: We performed bioinformatics …
Purpose
Identification of clinically actionable molecular subtypes of pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) is key to improving patient outcome. Intertumoral metabolic heterogeneity contributes to cancer survival and the balance between distinct metabolic pathways may influence PDAC outcome. We hypothesized that PDAC can be stratified into prognostic metabolic subgroups based on alterations in the expression of genes involved in glycolysis and cholesterol synthesis.
Experimental Design
We performed bioinformatics analysis of genomic, transcriptomic, and clinical data in an integrated cohort of 325 resectable and nonresectable PDAC. The resectable datasets included retrospective The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) and the International Cancer Genome Consortium (ICGC) cohorts. The nonresectable PDAC cohort studies included prospective COMPASS, PanGen, and BC Cancer Personalized OncoGenomics program (POG).
Results
On the basis of the median normalized expression of glycolytic and cholesterogenic genes, four subgroups were identified: quiescent, glycolytic, cholesterogenic, and mixed. Glycolytic tumors were associated with the shortest median survival in resectable (log-rank test P = 0.018) and metastatic settings (log-rank test P = 0.027). Patients with cholesterogenic tumors had the longest median survival. KRAS and MYC-amplified tumors had higher expression of glycolytic genes than tumors with normal or lost copies of the oncogenes (Wilcoxon rank sum test P = 0.015). Glycolytic tumors had the lowest expression of mitochondrial pyruvate carriers MPC1 and MPC2. Glycolytic and cholesterogenic gene expression correlated with the expression of prognostic PDAC subtype classifier genes.
Conclusions
Metabolic classification specific to glycolytic and cholesterogenic pathways provides novel biological insight into previously established PDAC subtypes and may help develop personalized therapies targeting unique tumor metabolic profiles.
See related commentary by Mehla and Singh, p. 6
AACR