Collectively, our study showed that BRAF-activated noncoding RNA promotes pancreatic cancer tumorigenesis through miR-195-5p/Wnt/β-catenin axis may serve as a potential target for diagnostics and therapeutics in pancreatic cancer.
Silencing PRMT5 induces epithelial marker E-cadherin expression and down-regulates expression of mesenchymal markers including Vimentin, collagen I and β-catenin in PaTu8988 and SW1990 cells, whereas ectopic PRMT5 re-expression partially reverses these changes, indicating that PRMT5 promotes EMT in pancreatic cancer.
Here, we report ARHGAP4 as a new regulator of the β-catenin pathway that regulates cell invasion and migration of pancreatic cancer as well as the downstream effector MMP2 and MMP9 expression in vitro.
Our study suggests that the miR-519d-3p/RPS15A/Wnt/β-catenin regulation axis plays an important role in the progression of pancreatic cancer and may serve as potential targets for treatment of pancreatic cancer.
As a key component of the Wnt signaling pathway, the β-catenin-transcription factor 7 like 1 (TCF7L1) complex activates transcription and regulates downstream target genes that serve important roles in the pathology of pancreatic cancer.
Based on our data, β-catenin may be involved in cancer invasion in pancreatic cancer, and it is not associated with CD44, the invasion related protein.
Our results suggest that miR-137 reduces stemness features of pancreatic cancer cells by Targeting KLF12-associated Wnt/β-catenin pathways and may identify new diagnostic and therapeutic targets in pancreatic cancer.
CUL4B and β-catenin were expressed at a higher level in PC tissues than in paracancerous tissues though paracancerous tissues had higher expressions of CUL4B and β-catenin than normal tissues.
CDK8 overexpression promoted angiogenesis in pancreatic cancer via activation of the CDK8-β-catenin-KLF2 signaling axis, as demonstrated by the upregulation and downregulation of signals representing the rate-limiting steps in angiogenesis.
Collectively, our study demonstrated that CISD2 could be an independent prognostic factor for pancreatic cancer and suggested that the CISD2/Wnt/β-catenin pathway contributes to the proliferation of pancreatic cancer cells and EMT, hinting at a novel promising molecular target in the therapeutic strategy for pancreatic cancer.
Given the potent role of Wnt/β-catenin signaling in breast and pancreatic cancer and the flurry of activity to test β-catenin inhibitors in the clinic, our findings are opportune and provide evidence for Merlin in restraining aberrant activation of Wnt/β-catenin signaling.
Our work suggests that ROBO3 may contribute to the progression of pancreatic cancer by sequestering Wnt inhibitor SFRP, which in turn leads to increased Wnt/β-catenin pathway activity.