2025-04-15T10:48:32Z
2025-04-15T10:48:32Z
2025-12-01
2025-04-15T10:48:32Z
Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) displays a high degree of spatial subtype heterogeneity and co-existence, linked to a diverse microenvironment and worse clinical outcome. However, the underlying mechanisms remain unclear. Here, by combining preclinical models, multi-center clinical, transcriptomic, proteomic, and patient bioimaging data, we identify an interplay between neoplastic intrinsic AP1 transcription factor dichotomy and extrinsic macrophages driving subtype co-existence and an immunosuppressive microenvironment. ATAC-, ChIP-, and RNA-seq analyses reveal that JUNB/AP1- and HDAC-mediated epigenetic programs repress pro-inflammatory signatures in tumor cells, antagonizing cJUN/AP1 signaling, favoring a therapy-responsive classical neoplastic state. This dichotomous regulation is amplified via regional TNF-α+ macrophages, which associates with a reactive phenotype and reduced CD8+ T cell infiltration in patients. Consequently, combined preclinical anti-TNF-α immunotherapy and chemotherapy reduces macrophages and promotes CD3+/CD8+ T cell infiltration in basal-like PDAC, improving survival. Hence, tumor cell-intrinsic epigenetic programs, together with extrinsic microenvironmental cues, facilitate intratumoral subtype heterogeneity and disease progression.
Article
Published version
English
Càncer de pàncrees; Tumors; Limfòcits; Epigènesi; Pancreas cancer; Tumors; Lymphocytes; Epigenesis
Nature Publishing Group
Reproducció del document publicat a:
Nature Communications, 2025, vol. 16, num.1
cc-by (c) Klein, L. et al., 2025
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/