Pancreatic cancer-derived exosomal microrna-19a induces β-cell dysfunction by targeting adcy1 and epac2

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Abstract

New-onset diabetes mellitus has a rough correlation with pancreatic cancer (PaC), but the underlying mechanism remains unclear. This study aimed to explore the exosomal microRNAs and their potential role in PaC-induced β-cell dysfunction. The pancreatic β cells were treated with isolated exosomes from PaC cell lines, SW1990 and BxPC-3, before measuring the glucose-stimulated insulin secretion (GSIS), validating that SW1990 and BxPC-3 might disrupt GSIS of both β cell line MIN6 and primary mouse pancreatic islets. The difference in expression profiles between exosomes and exosome-free medium of PaC cell lines was further defined, revealing that miR-19a secreted by PaC cells might be an important signaling molecule in this process. Furthermore, adenylyl cyclase 1 (Adcy1) and exchange protein directly activated by cAMP 2 (Epac2) were verified as the direct targets of exogenous miR-19a, which was involved in insulin secretion. These results indicated that exosomes might be an important mediator in the pathogenesis of PaC-DM, and miR-19a might be the effector molecule. The findings shed light on the pathogenesis of PaC-DM.

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APA

Pang, W., Yao, W., Dai, X., Zhang, A., Hou, L., Wang, L., … Li, L. (2021). Pancreatic cancer-derived exosomal microrna-19a induces β-cell dysfunction by targeting adcy1 and epac2. International Journal of Biological Sciences, 17(14), 3622–3633. https://doi.org/10.7150/ijbs.56271

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