NFATC2 in pancreatic cancer-associated fibroblasts predicts treatment response and facilitates ERBB-targeted therapies

Read the full article See related articles

Discuss this preprint

Start a discussion What are Sciety discussions?

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) remains a lethal malignancy, with therapeutic resistance influenced by a dense desmoplastic stroma dominated by cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAF). Using single-cell RNA-sequencing and gene regulatory network modeling of 42 PDAC tumors, we identified a CAF subpopulation characterized by elevated NFATC2 expression that is enriched in patients with improved therapeutic response and survival. NFATC2+ CAFs exhibited tumor-suppressive features, including enhanced apoptotic signaling and suppression of ERBB pathway activity. Co-culture experiments demonstrated that NFATC2+ CAFs restrain pancreatic cancer cell growth and enhance chemotherapy-induced apoptosis, increasing sensitivity to standard-of-care chemotherapy regimens and synergizing with ERBB-targeted therapies. The favorable effect of NFATC2+ CAFs on chemotherapy response was validated in two other PDAC cohorts and in rectal cancer. Together, these findings identify NFATC2+ CAFs as a therapy-conditioned stromal state linked to improved treatment response and uncover a context-dependent vulnerability within the tumor microenvironment that may be exploited to rationally optimize combination therapies.

Article activity feed