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DOI: 10.1126/science.aaw3145
¤ OpenAccess: Bronze
This work has “Bronze” OA status. This means it is free to read on the publisher landing page, but without any identifiable license.

The glycan CA19-9 promotes pancreatitis and pancreatic cancer in mice

Dannielle D. Engle,Hervé Tiriac,Keith Rivera,Arnaud Pommier,Sean Whalen,Tobiloba E. Oni,Brinda Alagesan,Eun Jung Lee,Melissa A. Yao,Matthew S. Lucito,Benjamin Spielman,Brandon Da Silva,Christina Schoepfer,Kevin Wright,Brianna Creighton,Lauren Afinowicz,Kenneth H. Yu,Robert Grützmann,Daniela E. Aust,Phyllis A. Gimotty,Katherine S. Pollard,Ralph H. Hruban,Michael Goggins,Christian Pilarsky,Young-Kyu Park,Darryl Pappin,Michael A. Hollingsworth,David A. Tuveson

CA19-9
Pancreatic cancer
Pancreatitis
2019
Sweet bystander becomes a villain Patients with pancreatic cancer often have elevated blood levels of CA19-9, a carbohydrate antigen present on many proteins. CA19-9 is thus commonly used as a biomarker for diagnosing and monitoring disease progression. In a study of mice, Engle et al. found that CA19-9 may be more than an innocent bystander that marks the presence of pancreatic disease; it may play a causal role in disease (see the Perspective by Halbrook and Crawford). Transgenic mice expressing the human enzymes that add CA19-9 to proteins developed severe pancreatitis that could be reversed by treatment with CA19-9 antibodies. When the transgenic mice also harbored a Kras oncogene, they went on to develop pancreatic cancer. These unexpected observations suggest new avenues for the treatment of pancreatic disease. Science , this issue p. 1156 ; see also p. 1132
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    The glycan CA19-9 promotes pancreatitis and pancreatic cancer in mice” is a paper by Dannielle D. Engle Hervé Tiriac Keith Rivera Arnaud Pommier Sean Whalen Tobiloba E. Oni Brinda Alagesan Eun Jung Lee Melissa A. Yao Matthew S. Lucito Benjamin Spielman Brandon Da Silva Christina Schoepfer Kevin Wright Brianna Creighton Lauren Afinowicz Kenneth H. Yu Robert Grützmann Daniela E. Aust Phyllis A. Gimotty Katherine S. Pollard Ralph H. Hruban Michael Goggins Christian Pilarsky Young-Kyu Park Darryl Pappin Michael A. Hollingsworth David A. Tuveson published in 2019. It has an Open Access status of “bronze”. You can read and download a PDF Full Text of this paper here.