We conclude that deregulation of c-MYC protein is common in pancreatic cancer and that it may be involved in early neoplastic development and progression rather than in locoregional spread of invasive cancer.
Indeed, in some PDA cell lines, RNA interference-mediated silencing of c-MYC expression had antiproliferative effects similar to that of MEK inhibition, thereby highlighting the importance of c-MYC in key aspects of pancreatic cancer cell maintenance.
We investigated the therapeutic potential of a new oligonucleotide-mediated gene silencing technology (U1 Adaptor) targeting KRAS and MYC in pancreatic cancer.
This study illustrated that LINC01420 accelerates PC progression through releasing miR-494-3p-silenced MYC in cytoplasm and upregulating MYC-activated KRAS in nucleus, unveiling LINC01420 as a latent therapeutic strategy for PC patients.