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Background Oncogenic ‘hotspot’ mutations of KRAS and GNAS are two major driver alterations in intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasms (IPMNs), which are bona fide precursors to pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma. We previously reported that pancreas-specific Kras G12D and Gnas R201C co-expression in p48 Cre ; Kras LSL-G12D ; Rosa26 LSL-rtTA ; Tg (TetO-Gnas R201C ) mice ( ‘Kras;Gnas ’ mice) caused development of cystic lesions recapitulating IPMNs. Objective We aim to unveil the consequences of mutant Gnas R201C expression on phenotype, transcriptomic profile and genomic dependencies. Design We performed multimodal transcriptional profiling (bulk RNA sequencing, single-cell RNA sequencing and spatial transcriptomics) in the ‘Kras;Gnas ’ autochthonous model and tumour-derived cell lines ( Kras;Gnas cells), where Gnas R201C expression is inducible. A genome-wide CRISPR/ Cas 9 screen was conducted to identify potential vulnerabilities in Kras G12D ;Gnas R201C co-expressing cells. Results Induction of Gnas R201C —and resulting G (s) alpha signalling—leads to the emergence of a gene signature of gastric (pyloric type) metaplasia in pancreatic neoplastic epithelial cells. CRISPR screening identified the synthetic essentiality of glycolysis-related genes Gpi1 and Slc2a1 in Kras G12D ; Gnas R201C co-expressing cells. Real-time metabolic analyses in Kras;Gnas cells and autochthonous Kras;Gnas model confirmed enhanced glycolysis on Gnas R201C induction. Induction of Gnas R201C made Kras G12D expressing cells more dependent on glycolysis for their survival. Protein kinase A-dependent phosphorylation of the glycolytic intermediate enzyme 6-phosphofructo-2-kinase/fructose-2,6-biphosphatase 3 (PFKFB3) was a driver of increased glycolysis on Gnas R201C induction. Conclusion Multiple orthogonal approaches demonstrate that Kras G12D and Gnas R201C co-expression results in a gene signature of gastric pyloric metaplasia and glycolytic dependency during IPMN pathogenesis. The observed metabolic reprogramming may provide a potential target for therapeutics and interception of IPMNs.
Makino et al. (Fri,) studied this question.