Jiao X et al. (MAR 2010)
The Journal of biological chemistry 285 11 8218--26
c-Jun induces mammary epithelial cellular invasion and breast cancer stem cell expansion.
The molecular mechanisms governing breast tumor cellular self-renewal contribute to breast cancer progression and therapeutic resistance. The ErbB2 oncogene is overexpressed in approximately 30% of human breast cancers. c-Jun,the first cellular proto-oncogene,is overexpressed in human breast cancer. However,the role of endogenous c-Jun in mammary tumor progression is unknown. Herein,transgenic mice expressing the mammary gland-targeted ErbB2 oncogene were crossed with c-jun(f/f) transgenic mice to determine the role of endogenous c-Jun in mammary tumor invasion and stem cell function. The excision of c-jun by Cre recombinase reduced cellular migration,invasion,and mammosphere formation of ErbB2-induced mammary tumors. Proteomic analysis identified a subset of secreted proteins (stem cell factor (SCF) and CCL5) induced by ErbB2 expression that were dependent upon endogenous c-Jun expression. SCF and CCL5 were identified as transcriptionally induced by c-Jun. CCL5 rescued the c-Jun-deficient breast tumor cellular invasion phenotype. SCF rescued the c-Jun-deficient mammosphere production. Endogenous c-Jun thus contributes to ErbB2-induced mammary tumor cell invasion and self-renewal.
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Wu H et al. (SEP 2011)
Journal of breast cancer 14 3 175--80
Can CD44+/CD24- Tumor Cells Be Used to Determine the Extent of Breast Cancer Invasion Following Neoadjuvant Chemotherapy?
PURPOSE: To investigate the distribution of CD44(+)/CD24(-) cells in breast cancers in relation to tumor size before and after the administration of neoadjuvant chemotherapy. METHODS: CD44(+)/CD24(-) tumor cells obtained from breast cancer specimens were characterized in vivo and in vitro using tumor formation assays and mammosphere generation assays,respectively. The distribution of CD44+/CD24- tumor cells in 78 breast cancer specimens following administration of neoadjuvant chemotherapy was also evaluated using immunofluorescence assays,and this distribution was compared with the extent of tumor invasion predicted by Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumours (RECIST). RESULTS: In 27/78 cases,complete remission (CR) was identified using RECIST. However,18 of these CR cases were associated with a scattered distribution of tumor stem cells in the outline of the original tumor prior to neoadjuvant chemotherapy. After neoadjuvant chemotherapy,24 cases involved cancer cells that were confined to the tumor outline,and 21 cases had tumor cells or tumor stem cells overlapping the tumor outline. In addition,there were 6 patients who were insensitive to chemotherapy,and in these cases,both cancer cells and stem cells were detected outside the contours of the tumor volume imaged prior to chemotherapy. CONCLUSION: CD44+/CD24- tumor cells may be an additional parameter to evaluate when determining the extent of breast cancer invasion.
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Harris MA et al. (DEC 2008)
Cancer research 68 24 10051--9
Cancer stem cells are enriched in the side population cells in a mouse model of glioma.
The recent identification of cancer stem cells (CSCs) in multiple human cancers provides a new inroad to understanding tumorigenesis at the cellular level. CSCs are defined by their characteristics of self-renewal,multipotentiality,and tumor initiation upon transplantation. By testing for these defining characteristics,we provide evidence for the existence of CSCs in a transgenic mouse model of glioma,S100beta-verbB;Trp53. In this glioma model,CSCs are enriched in the side population (SP) cells. These SP cells have enhanced tumor-initiating capacity,self-renewal,and multipotentiality compared with non-SP cells from the same tumors. Furthermore,gene expression analysis comparing fluorescence-activated cell sorting-sorted cancer SP cells to non-SP cancer cells and normal neural SP cells identified 45 candidate genes that are differentially expressed in glioma stem cells. We validated the expression of two genes from this list (S100a4 and S100a6) in primary mouse gliomas and human glioma samples. Analyses of xenografted human glioblastoma multiforme cell lines and primary human glioma tissues show that S100A4 and S100A6 are expressed in a small subset of cancer cells and that their abundance is positively correlated to tumor grade. In conclusion,this study shows that CSCs exist in a mouse glioma model,suggesting that this model can be used to study the molecular and cellular characteristics of CSCs in vivo and to further test the CSC hypothesis.
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Maenhaut C et al. (FEB 2010)
Carcinogenesis 31 2 149--58
Cancer stem cells: a reality, a myth, a fuzzy concept or a misnomer? An analysis.
The concept of cancer stem cells (CSC) embodies two aspects: the stem cell as the initial target of the oncogenic process and the existence of two populations of cells in cancers: the CSC and derived cells. The second is discussed in this review. CSC are defined as cells having three properties: a selectively endowed tumorigenic capacity,an ability to recreate the full repertoire of cancer cells of the parent tumor and the expression of a distinctive repertoire of surface biomarkers. In operational terms,the CSC are among all cancer cells those able to initiate a xenotransplant. Other explicit or implicit assumptions exist,including the concept of CSC as a single unique infrequent population of cells. To avoid such assumptions,we propose to use the operational term tumor-propagating cells (TPC); indeed,the cells that initiate transplants did not initiate the cancer. The experimental evidence supporting the explicit definition is analyzed. Cancers indeed contain a fraction of cells mainly responsible for the tumor development. However,there is evidence that these cells do not represent one homogenous population. Moreover,there is no evidence that the derived cells result from an asymmetric,qualitative and irreversible process. A more general model is proposed of which the CSC model could be one extreme case. We propose that the TPC are multiple evolutionary selected cancer cells with the most competitive properties [maintained by (epi-)genetic mechanisms],at least partially reversible,quantitative rather than qualitative and resulting from a stochastic rather than deterministic process.
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Denè et al. (SEP 2013)
Clinical chemistry 59 9 1384--92
Capture of viable circulating tumor cells in the liver of colorectal cancer patients.
BACKGROUND The incidence and number of circulating tumor cells (CTCs) in the peripheral blood of colorectal cancer patients are lower than in other cancer types,which may point to a particular biology of colorectal cancer affecting CTC detection. METHODS We detected CTCs in the peripheral and mesenteric blood of colorectal cancer patients by use of 2 independent technologies on the basis of different biological properties of colon cancer cells. Seventy-five patients diagnosed with localized (M0,n = 60) and metastatic (M1,n = 15) colorectal cancer were included. Peripheral and mesenteric blood samples were collected before tumor resection. We performed CTC enumeration with an EpCAM-independent enrichment method followed by the Epispot assay that detected only viable CK19-releasing CTCs. In parallel,we used the FDA-cleared EpCAM-dependent CellSearch® as the reference method. RESULTS The enumeration of CK19-releasing cells by the CK19-Epispot assay revealed viable CTCs in 27 of 41 (65.9%) and 41 of 74 (55.4%) (P = 0.04) patients in mesenteric and peripheral blood,respectively,whereas CellSearch detected CTCs in 19 of 34 (55.9%) and 20 of 69 (29.0%) (P = 0.0046) patients. In mesenteric blood,medians of 4 (range 0-247) and 2.7 CTCs (range 0-286) were found with Epispot and CellSearch (P = 0.2),respectively,whereas in peripheral blood,Epispot and CellSearch detected a median of 1.2 (range 0-92) and 0 CTCs (range 0-147) (P = 0.002). CONCLUSIONS A considerable portion of viable CTCs detectable by the Epispot assay are trapped in the liver as the first filter organ in CRC patients.
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Wu K et al. (JAN 2011)
The Journal of biological chemistry 286 3 2132--42
Cell fate determination factor Dachshund reprograms breast cancer stem cell function.
The cell fate determination factor Dachshund was cloned as a dominant inhibitor of the hyperactive epidermal growth factor receptor ellipse. The expression of Dachshund is lost in human breast cancer associated with poor prognosis. Breast tumor-initiating cells (TIC) may contribute to tumor progression and therapy resistance. Here,endogenous DACH1 was reduced in breast cancer cell lines with high expression of TIC markers and in patient samples of the basal breast cancer phenotype. Re-expression of DACH1 reduced new tumor formation in serial transplantations in vivo,reduced mammosphere formation,and reduced the proportion of CD44(high)/CD24(low) breast tumor cells. Conversely,lentiviral shRNA to DACH1 increased the breast (B)TIC population. Genome-wide expression studies of mammary tumors demonstrated DACH1 repressed a molecular signature associated with stem cells (SOX2,Nanog,and KLF4) and genome-wide ChIP-seq analysis identified DACH1 binding to the promoter of the Nanog,KLF4,and Lin28 genes. KLF4/c-Myc and Oct4/Sox2 antagonized DACH1 repression of BTIC. Mechanistic studies demonstrated DACH1 directly repressed the Nanog and Sox2 promoters via a conserved domain. Endogenous DACH1 regulates BTIC in vitro and in vivo.
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Ben-David U and Benvenisty N (MAR 2014)
Nature protocols 9 3 729--740
Chemical ablation of tumor-initiating human pluripotent stem cells.
The tumorigenicity of human pluripotent stem cells (hPSCs) is widely acknowledged as a major obstacle that withholds their application in regenerative medicine. This protocol describes two efficient and robust ways to chemically eliminate the tumor-initiating hPSCs from monolayer culture. The protocol details how to maintain and differentiate hPSCs,how to apply chemical inhibitors to cultures of hPSCs and their differentiated progeny,and how to assess the purity of the resultant cell cultures using in vitro and in vivo assays. It also describes how to rescue the cytotoxic effect. The elimination and the rescue assay can be completed within 3-5 d,the in vitro assessment requires another day,and the in vivo assessment requires up to 12 additional weeks.
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Thirant C et al. (JAN 2011)
PloS one 6 1 e16375
Clinical relevance of tumor cells with stem-like properties in pediatric brain tumors.
BACKGROUND: Primitive brain tumors are the leading cause of cancer-related death in children. Tumor cells with stem-like properties (TSCs),thought to account for tumorigenesis and therapeutic resistance,have been isolated from high-grade gliomas in adults. Whether TSCs are a common component of pediatric brain tumors and are of clinical relevance remains to be determined. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Tumor cells with self-renewal properties were isolated with cell biology techniques from a majority of 55 pediatric brain tumors samples,regardless of their histopathologies and grades of malignancy (57% of embryonal tumors,57% of low-grade gliomas and neuro-glial tumors,70% of ependymomas,91% of high-grade gliomas). Most high-grade glioma-derived oncospheres (10/12) sustained long-term self-renewal akin to neural stem cells (textgreater7 self-renewals),whereas cells with limited renewing abilities akin to neural progenitors dominated in all other tumors. Regardless of tumor entities,the young age group was associated with self-renewal properties akin to neural stem cells (P = 0.05,chi-square test). Survival analysis of the cohort showed an association between isolation of cells with long-term self-renewal abilities and a higher patient mortality rate (P = 0.013,log-rank test). Sampling of low- and high-grade glioma cultures showed that self-renewing cells forming oncospheres shared a molecular profile comprising embryonic and neural stem cell markers. Further characterization performed on subsets of high-grade gliomas and one low-grade glioma culture showed combination of this profile with mesenchymal markers,the radio-chemoresistance of the cells and the formation of aggressive tumors after intracerebral grafting. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: In brain tumors affecting adult patients,TSCs have been isolated only from high-grade gliomas. In contrast,our data show that tumor cells with stem cell-like or progenitor-like properties can be isolated from a wide range of histological sub-types and grades of pediatric brain tumors. They suggest that cellular mechanisms fueling tumor development differ between adult and pediatric brain tumors.
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Liu C et al. (MAY 2012)
Molecular biology reports 39 5 5875--81
Co-expression of Oct-4 and Nestin in human breast cancers.
The aim is to investigate the clinical implications of the Oct-4 and Nestin protein in human breast cancers. A total of 346 cases including 26 fresh and 320 paraffin-embedded tumor tissues were selected for characterizing the frequency of CD44(+)CD24(-) tumor cells by flow cytometry and the differential expression of the stem cell-related genes between CD44(+)CD24(-) and non-CD44(+)CD24(-) tumor cells was analyzed by PCR Array and immunofluorescence. In comparison with the non-CD44(+)CD24(-) tumor cells,the CD44(+)CD24(-),particularly for those with high percentage of Oct-4(+) and Nestin(+),tumor cells had higher tumorigenicity by forming mammospheres in vitro. More importantly,42 (13.125%) out of 320 tumor tissues were positive for Oct-4 and Nestin staining. Universal analysis and multivariate analysis revealed that the expression of Oct-4 and Nestin was associated significantly with younger age,pathogenic degrees,lymph node metastasis and triple-negative breast cancer independently (P textless 0.05) as well as shorter survival (P = 0.001). Oct-4 and Nestin were important regulators of the development of breast cancer,and Oct-4 and Nestin may be used as predictors for the prognosis of breast cancers.
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Fan H and Guan J-L (MAY 2011)
The Journal of biological chemistry 286 21 18573--82
Compensatory function of Pyk2 protein in the promotion of focal adhesion kinase (FAK)-null mammary cancer stem cell tumorigenicity and metastatic activity.
Mammary cancer stem cells (MaCSCs) have been identified as a rare population of cells capable of self-renewal to drive mammary tumorigenesis and metastasis. Nevertheless,relatively little is known about the intracellular signaling pathways regulating self-renewal and metastatic activities of MaCSCs in vivo. Using a recently developed breast cancer mouse model with focal adhesion kinase (FAK) deletion in mammary tumor cells (MFCKO-MT mice),here we present evidence suggesting a compensatory function of Pyk2,a FAK-related kinase,in the regulation of MaCSCs and metastasis in these mice. Increased expression of Pyk2 was found selectively in pulmonary metastatic nodules of MFCKO-MT mice,and its inhibition significantly reduced mammary tumor development and metastasis in these mice. Consistent with the idea of metastasis driven by MaCSCs,we detected selective up-regulation of Pyk2 in MaCSCs,but not bulk mammary tumor cells,of primary tumors developed in MFCKO-MT mice. We further showed that inhibition of Pyk2 in FAK-null MaCSCs significantly decreased their tumorsphere formation and migration in vitro as well as self-renewal,tumorigenicity,and metastatic activity in vivo. Last,we identified PI3K/Akt signaling as a major mediator of FAK regulation of MaCSCs as well as a target for the compensatory function of Pyk2 in FAK-null MaCSCs. Together,these results further advance our understanding of FAK and its related tyrosine kinase Pyk2 in regulation of MaCSCs in breast cancer and suggest that pharmaceutically targeting these kinases may hold promise as a novel treatment for the disease by targeting and eradicating MaCSCs.
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Chen Y-W et al. (NOV 2010)
Molecular cancer therapeutics 9 11 2879--92
Cucurbitacin I suppressed stem-like property and enhanced radiation-induced apoptosis in head and neck squamous carcinoma--derived CD44(+)ALDH1(+) cells.
Head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) is a prevalent cancer worldwide. Signal transducers and activators of transcription 3 (STAT3) signaling is reported to promote tumor malignancy and recurrence in HNSCC. Cucurbitacins,triterpenoid derivatives,are strong STAT3 inhibitors with anticancer properties. Recent studies have shown aldehyde dehydrogenase 1 (ALDH1) to be a marker of cancer stem cells (CSC) in HNSCC. The aim of this study was to investigate the therapeutic effect of cucurbitacin I in HNSCC-derived CSCs. Using immunohistochemical analysis,we firstly showed that CD44,ALDH1,and phosphorylated STAT3 (p-STAT3) were higher in high-grade HNSCCs,and that triple positivity for CD44/ALDH1/p-STAT3 indicated a worse prognosis for HNSCC patients. Secondly,CD44(+)ALDH1(+) cells isolated from seven HNSCC patients showed greater tumorigenicity,radioresistance,and high expression of stemness (Bmi-1/Oct-4/Nanog) and epithelial-mesenchymal-transitional (Snail/Twist) genes as p-STAT3 level increased. Furthermore,we found that cucurbitacin I (JSI-124) can effectively inhibit the expression of p-STAT3 and capacities for tumorigenicity,sphere formation,and radioresistance in HNSCC-CD44(+)ALDH1(+). Notably,150 nmol/L cucurbitacin I effectively blocked STAT3 signaling and downstream survivin and Bcl-2 expression,and it induced apoptosis in HNSCC-CD44(+)ALDH1(+). Moreover,microarray data indicated that 100 nmol/L cucurbitacin I facilitated CD44(+)ALDH1(+) cells to differentiate into CD44?ALDH1? and enhanced the radiosensitivity of HNSCC-CD44(+)ALDH1(+). Xenotransplant experiments revealed that cucurbitacin I combined with radiotherapy significantly suppressed tumorigenesis and lung metastasis and further improved the survival rate in HNSCC-CD44(+)ALDH1(+)-transplanted immunocompromised mice. Taken together,our data show that cucurbitacin I,STAT3 inhibitor,reduces radioresistant,distant-metastatic,and CSC-like properties of HNSCC-CD44(+)ALDH1(+) cells. The potential of cucurbitacin I as a radiosensitizer should be verified in future anti-CSC therapy.
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Arbab AS et al. (SEP 2008)
FASEB journal : official publication of the Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology 22 9 3234--46
Detection of migration of locally implanted AC133+ stem cells by cellular magnetic resonance imaging with histological findings.
This study investigated the factors responsible for migration and homing of magnetically labeled AC133(+) cells at the sites of active angiogenesis in tumor. AC133(+) cells labeled with ferumoxide-protamine sulfate were mixed with either rat glioma or human melanoma cells and implanted in flank of nude mice. An MRI of the tumors including surrounding tissues was performed. Tumor sections were stained for Prussian blue (PB),platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF),hypoxia-inducible factor-1alpha (HIF-1alpha),stromal cell derived factor-1 (SDF-1),matrix metalloproteinase-2 (MMP-2),vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF),and endothelial markers. Fresh snap-frozen strips from the central and peripheral parts of the tumor were collected for Western blotting. MRIs demonstrated hypointense regions at the periphery of the tumors where the PB(+)/AC133(+) cells were positive for endothelial cells markers. At the sites of PB(+)/AC133(+) cells,both HIF-1alpha and SDF-1 were strongly positive and PDGF and MMP-2 showed generalized expression in the tumor and surrounding tissues. There was no significant association of PB(+)/AC133(+) cell localization and VEGF expression in tumor cells. Western blot demonstrated strong expression of the SDF-1,MMP-2,and PDGF at the peripheral parts of the tumors. HIF-1alpha was expressed at both the periphery and central parts of the tumor. This work demonstrates that magnetically labeled cells can be used as probes for MRI and histological identification of administered cells.
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