1. Academic Validation
  2. Hypoxia-induced histone methylation and NF-κB activation in pancreas cancer fibroblasts promote EMT-supportive growth factor secretion

Hypoxia-induced histone methylation and NF-κB activation in pancreas cancer fibroblasts promote EMT-supportive growth factor secretion

  • bioRxiv. 2025 Feb 5:2025.01.30.635486. doi: 10.1101/2025.01.30.635486.
Karl M Kowalewski Sara J Adair Anne Talkington Jason J Wieder Jason R Pitarresi Kia Perez-Vale Britney Chu Sepideh Dolatshahi Rosalie Sears Ben Z Stanger Todd W Bauer Matthew J Lazzara
Abstract

The pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) tumor microenvironment contains hypoxic tissue subdomains and cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs) of multiple subtypes that play tumor-promoting and -restraining roles. Here, we demonstrate that hypoxia promotes an inflammatory-like CAF phenotype and that hypoxic CAFs selectively promote epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) in PDAC Cancer cells through growth factor-mediated cell crosstalk. By analyzing patient tumor single-cell transcriptomics and conducting an inhibitor screen, we identified IGF-2 and HGF as specific EMT-inducing growth factors produced by hypoxic CAFs. We further found that reactive oxygen species-activated NF-κB cooperates with hypoxia-dependent histone methylation to promote IGF-2 and HGF expression in hypoxic CAFs. In lineage-traced autochthonous PDAC mouse tumors, hypoxic CAFs resided preferentially near hypoxic, mesenchymal Cancer cells. However, in subcutaneous tumors engineered with hypoxia fate-mapped CAFs, once-hypoxic re-oxygenated CAFs lacked a spatial correlation with mesenchymal Cancer cells. Thus, hypoxia promotes reversible CAF-malignant cell interactions that drive EMT through druggable signaling pathways.

One-sentence summary: We show that hypoxic fibroblasts in pancreas Cancer leverage histone methylation and ROS-mediated NF-κB activation to produce growth factors that drive epithelial-mesenchymal transition in malignant cells, demonstrating how tumor stromal features cooperate to initiate a signaling process for disease progression.

Figures
Products