Abstract
Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) remains one of the deadliest human cancers. The current largest published PDAC Genome-Wide Association Study (GWAS) identified 23 genetic risk signals, but most lack sufficient characterization. This study aimed to functionally characterize the chr13q12.2 ( PLUT / PDX1 ) PDAC GWAS risk locus. Fine-mapping, luciferase reporter assays, and electrophoretic mobility shift assays implicated rs9581943, a PDX1 promoter SNP, as a functional variant underlying this GWAS signal. GTEx expression QTL analyses identified rs9581943 as a significant PDX1 eQTL in pancreas, and CRISPR/Cas9 editing in PDAC-derived cell lines confirmed a functional relationship. PDX1 is a transcription factor involved in early pancreas development and β-cell homeostasis, but its role in exocrine pancreatic cells is unclear. Single-nucleus RNA-seq analyses of pancreatic acinar and ductal cells from neonatal, adult, and chronic pancreatitis donors suggested PDX1 activity alleviates high secretory load and ER-stress in acinar and biases ducts toward homeostatic phenotypes. Similarly, scRNA-seq analyses of pancreatic tumors suggested PDX1 activity reduces biosynthetic and inflammatory stress and promotes epithelial differentiation. Our study therefore implicates rs9581943 as a causal variant for the chr13q12.2 PDAC GWAS signal wherein the risk allele reduces PDX1 expression, eroding PDX1's capacity to buffer stress and stabilize epithelial cell fate in the exocrine compartment.