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Ariana Sattler, Ph.D., right, and Ece Eksi, Ph.D., are co-authors on a new study that found that certain nerves may support pancreatic cancer growth. Photo Credit: OHSU/Christine Torres Hicks |
Scientific Frontline: Extended "At a Glance" Summary: The Role of Sympathetic Nerves in Pancreatic Cancer
The Core Concept: Sympathetic nerves, which regulate the body's "fight or flight" stress response, can infiltrate pancreatic tumors and actively facilitate their growth by communicating with cancer cells and surrounding support cells.
Key Distinction/Mechanism: Traditional oncology has heavily focused on intra-tumor components like immune cells, blood vessels, and fibroblasts while largely overlooking the nervous system, as the main bodies of nerve cells reside outside the tumor. This new paradigm demonstrates that nerves structurally infiltrate the tumor microenvironment and chemically alter the behavior of cancer cells and cancer-associated fibroblasts to promote malignancy.
Major Frameworks/Components:
- Tumor Microenvironment Integration: Sympathetic nerves act as an external support system, directly embedding into and altering the pancreatic tumor ecosystem.
- Prognostic Genetic Markers: The presence of sympathetic-associated genes correlates with poor survival rates in human patients with pancreatic cancer.
- Sex-Specific Phenotypes: Experimental removal of sympathetic nerves in mouse models resulted in reduced tumor size exclusively in female mice, suggesting that sex hormones heavily influence nerve-tumor communication.