Radiotherapy drives lung metastasis in PDAC via a RhoGTPase signaling shift towards MRCK-dependency

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Abstract

Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) is an aggressive cancer with an extremely poor prognosis, partly owing to its highly metastatic nature. Although radiotherapy is an effective and potentially curative treatment modality, research over the last few decades has indicated that it may induce a more metastatic phenotype in surviving cancer cells. We demonstrate for the first time that clinically relevant doses of image-guided targeted radiotherapy induce metastasis in a genetically engineered KPC mouse model of PDAC. Furthermore, this induction is largely driven by an organotropic switch in lung metastasis. Using an in vitro RNAi screening approach, we identified a key role for myotonic dystrophy-related Cdc42-binding kinase (MRCK) in driving this response. MRCK activity was spatially upregulated at the plasma membrane in response to radiotherapy in PDAC cell lines as well as at the invasive margins of PDAC tumors. This upregulation of activity was maintained in metastases, suggesting an important role for MRCK in not only triggering local invasion in response to radiotherapy but also promoting distant metastases. Importantly, inhibition of MRCK with a small-molecule inhibitor (BDP9066) specifically opposed radiation-driven MRCK upregulation and pro-metastatic response.

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