Ginestier C et al. (NOV 2007)
Cell stem cell 1 5 555--67
ALDH1 is a marker of normal and malignant human mammary stem cells and a predictor of poor clinical outcome.
Application of stem cell biology to breast cancer research has been limited by the lack of simple methods for identification and isolation of normal and malignant stem cells. Utilizing in vitro and in vivo experimental systems,we show that normal and cancer human mammary epithelial cells with increased aldehyde dehydrogenase activity (ALDH) have stem/progenitor properties. These cells contain the subpopulation of normal breast epithelium with the broadest lineage differentiation potential and greatest growth capacity in a xenotransplant model. In breast carcinomas,high ALDH activity identifies the tumorigenic cell fraction,capable of self-renewal and of generating tumors that recapitulate the heterogeneity of the parental tumor. In a series of 577 breast carcinomas,expression of ALDH1 detected by immunostaining correlated with poor prognosis. These findings offer an important new tool for the study of normal and malignant breast stem cells and facilitate the clinical application of stem cell concepts.
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Kordon EC and Smith GH (MAY 1998)
Development (Cambridge,England) 125 10 1921--30
An entire functional mammary gland may comprise the progeny from a single cell.
Any epithelial portion of a normal mouse mammary gland can reproduce an entire functional gland when transplanted into an epithelium-free mammary fat pad. Mouse mammary hyperplasias and tumors are clonal dominant populations and probably represent the progeny of a single transformed cell. Our study provides evidence that single multipotent stem cells positioned throughout the mature fully developed mammary gland have the capacity to produce sufficient differentiated progeny to recapitulate an entire functional gland. Our evidence also demonstrates that these stem cells are self-renewing and are found with undiminished capacities in the newly regenerated gland. We have taken advantage of an experimental model where mouse mammary tumor virus infects mammary epithelial cells and inserts a deoxyribonucleic acid copy(ies) of its genome during replication. The insertions occur randomly within the somatic genome. CzechII mice have no endogenous nucleic acid sequence homology with mouse mammary tumor virus; therefore all viral insertions may be detected by Southern analysis provided a sufficient number of cells contain a specific insertional event. Transplantation of random fragments of infected CzechII mammary gland produced clonal-dominant epithelial populations in epithelium-free mammary fat pads. Serial transplantation of pieces of the clonally derived outgrowths produced second generation glands possessing the same viral insertion sites providing evidence for self-renewal of the original stem cell. Limiting dilution studies with cell cultures derived from third generation clonal outgrowths demonstrated that three multipotent but distinct mammary epithelial progenitors were present in clonally derived mammary epithelial populations. Estimation of the potential number of multipotent epithelial cells that may be evolved from an individual mammary-specific stem cell by self-renewal is in the order of 10(12)-10(13). Therefore,one stem cell might easily account for the renewal of mammary epithelium over several transplant generations.
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Diehn M et al. (APR 2009)
Nature 458 7239 780--3
Association of reactive oxygen species levels and radioresistance in cancer stem cells.
The metabolism of oxygen,although central to life,produces reactive oxygen species (ROS) that have been implicated in processes as diverse as cancer,cardiovascular disease and ageing. It has recently been shown that central nervous system stem cells and haematopoietic stem cells and early progenitors contain lower levels of ROS than their more mature progeny,and that these differences are critical for maintaining stem cell function. We proposed that epithelial tissue stem cells and their cancer stem cell (CSC) counterparts may also share this property. Here we show that normal mammary epithelial stem cells contain lower concentrations of ROS than their more mature progeny cells. Notably,subsets of CSCs in some human and murine breast tumours contain lower ROS levels than corresponding non-tumorigenic cells (NTCs). Consistent with ROS being critical mediators of ionizing-radiation-induced cell killing,CSCs in these tumours develop less DNA damage and are preferentially spared after irradiation compared to NTCs. Lower ROS levels in CSCs are associated with increased expression of free radical scavenging systems. Pharmacological depletion of ROS scavengers in CSCs markedly decreases their clonogenicity and results in radiosensitization. These results indicate that,similar to normal tissue stem cells,subsets of CSCs in some tumours contain lower ROS levels and enhanced ROS defences compared to their non-tumorigenic progeny,which may contribute to tumour radioresistance.
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Dierov J et al. (FEB 2009)
Leukemia 23 2 279--86
BCR/ABL induces chromosomal instability after genotoxic stress and alters the cell death threshold.
Earlier reports have suggested that the BCR/ABL oncogene,associated with chronic myeloid leukemia,induces a mutator phenotype; however,it is unclear whether this leads to long-term changes in chromosomes and whether the phenotype is found in primary chronic myelogeneous leukemia (CML) cells. We have addressed both these issues. BCR/ABL-expressing cell lines show an increase in DNA breaks after treatment with etoposide as compared to control cells. However,although BCR/ABL-expressing cell lines have an equivalent cell survival,they have an increase in chromosomal translocations after DNA repair as compared to control cells. This demonstrates that BCR/ABL expression decreases the fidelity of DNA repair. To see whether this is true in primary CML samples,normal CD34+ progenitor cells and CML progenitor cells were treated with etoposide. CML progenitor cells have equivalent survival but have an increase in DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs). Spectral karyotyping demonstrates new chromosomal translocations in CML cells,but not normal progenitor cells,consistent with error-prone DNA repair. Taken together,these data demonstrate that BCR/ABL enhances the accumulation of DSBs and alters the apoptotic threshold in CML leading to error-prone DNA repair.
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Liu S et al. (JAN 2011)
Cancer research 71 2 614--24
Breast cancer stem cells are regulated by mesenchymal stem cells through cytokine networks.
We have used in vitro and mouse xenograft models to examine the interaction between breast cancer stem cells (CSC) and bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells (MSC). We show that both of these cell populations are organized in a cellular hierarchy in which primitive aldehyde dehydrogenase expressing mesenchymal cells regulate breast CSCs through cytokine loops involving IL6 and CXCL7. In NOD/SCID mice,labeled MSCs introduced into the tibia traffic to sites of growing breast tumor xenografts where they accelerated tumor growth by increasing the breast CSC population. With immunochemistry,we identified MSC-CSC niches in these tumor xenografts as well as in frozen sections from primary human breast cancers. Bone marrow-derived MSCs may accelerate human breast tumor growth by generating cytokine networks that regulate the CSC population.
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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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Xaymardan M et al. (AUG 2009)
Stem cells (Dayton,Ohio) 27 8 1911--20
c-Kit function is necessary for in vitro myogenic differentiation of bone marrow hematopoietic cells.
In recent years,the differentiation of bone marrow cells (BMCs) into myocytes has been extensively investigated,but the findings remain inconclusive. The purpose of this study was to determine the conditions necessary to induce myogenic differentiation in short-term cultures of adult BMCs,and to identify the BMC subpopulation responsible for this phenomenon. We report that high-density cultures of murine hematopoietic BMCs gave rise to spontaneous beating cell clusters in the presence of vascular endothelial and fibroblast growth factors. These clusters originated from c-kit(pos) cells. The formation of the clusters could be completely blocked by adding a c-kit/tyrosine kinase inhibitor,Gleevec (imatinib mesylate; Novartis International,Basel,Switzerland,http://www.novartis.com),to the culture. Cluster formation was also blunted in BMCs from c-kit-deficient (Kit(W)/Kit(W-v)) mice. Clustered cells expressed cardiomyocyte-specific transcription factor genes Gata-4 and Nkx2.5,sarcomeric proteins beta-MHC and MLC-2v,and ANF and connexin-43. Immunostaining revealed alpha-sarcomeric actinin expression in more than 90% of clustered cells. Under electron microscopy,the clustered cells exhibited a sarcomeric myofiber arrangement and z-bands. This study defines the microenvironment required to achieve a reproducible in vitro model of beating,myogenic cell clusters. This model could be used to examine the mechanisms responsible for the postnatal myogenic differentiation of BMCs. Our results identify c-kit(pos) bone marrow hematopoietic cells as the source of the myogenic clusters.
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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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Shafee N et al. (MAY 2008)
Cancer research 68 9 3243--50
Cancer stem cells contribute to cisplatin resistance in Brca1/p53-mediated mouse mammary tumors.
The majority of BRCA1-associated breast cancers are basal cell-like,which is associated with a poor outcome. Using a spontaneous mouse mammary tumor model,we show that platinum compounds,which generate DNA breaks during the repair process,are more effective than doxorubicin in Brca1/p53-mutated tumors. At 0.5 mg/kg of daily cisplatin treatment,80% primary tumors (n = 8) show complete pathologic response. At greater dosages,100% show complete response (n = 19). However,after 2 to 3 months of complete remission following platinum treatment,tumors relapse and become refractory to successive rounds of treatment. Approximately 3.8% to 8.0% (mean,5.9%) of tumor cells express the normal mammary stem cell markers,CD29(hi)24(med),and these cells are tumorigenic,whereas CD29(med)24(-/lo) and CD29(med)24(hi) cells have diminished tumorigenicity or are nontumorigenic,respectively. In partially platinum-responsive primary transplants,6.6% to 11.0% (mean,8.8%) tumor cells are CD29(hi)24(med); these populations significantly increase to 16.5% to 29.2% (mean,22.8%; P textless 0.05) in platinum-refractory secondary tumor transplants. Further,refractory tumor cells have greater colony-forming ability than the primary transplant-derived cells in the presence of cisplatin. Expression of a normal stem cell marker,Nanog,is decreased in the CD29(hi)24(med) populations in the secondary transplants. Top2A expression is also down-regulated in secondary drug-resistant tumor populations and,in one case,was accompanied by genomic deletion of Top2A. These studies identify distinct cancer cell populations for therapeutic targeting in breast cancer and implicate clonal evolution and expansion of cancer stem-like cells as a potential cause of chemoresistance.
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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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Stingl J et al. (MAY 2001)
Breast cancer research and treatment 67 2 93--109
Characterization of bipotent mammary epithelial progenitor cells in normal adult human breast tissue.
The purpose of the present study was to characterize primitive epithelial progenitor populations present in adult normal human mammary tissue using a combination of flow cytometry and in vitro colony assay procedures. Three types of human breast epithelial cell (HBEC) progenitors were identified: luminal-restricted,myoepithelial-restricted and bipotent progenitors. The first type expressed epithelial cell adhesion molecule (EpCAM),alpha6 integrin and MUC1 and generated colonies composed exclusively of cells positive for the luminal-associated markers keratin 8/18,keratin 19,EpCAM and MUC1. Bipotent progenitors produced colonies containing a central core of cells expressing luminal markers surrounded by keratin 14+ myoepithelial-like cells. Single cell cultures confirmed the bipotentiality of these progenitors. Their high expression of alpha6 integrin and low expression of MUC1 suggests a basal position of these cells in the mammary epithelium in vivo. Serial passage in vitro of an enriched population of bipotent progenitors demonstrated that only myoepithelial-restricted progenitors could be readily generated under the culture conditions used. These results support a hierarchical branching model of HBEC progenitor differentiation from a primitive uncommitted cell to luminal- and myoepithelial-restricted progenitors.
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Liu C-G et al. (JUN 2011)
Annals of surgery 253 6 1165--71
Clinical implications of stem cell gene Oct-4 expression in breast cancer.
PURPOSE: To explore the expression of stem cell genes in breast cancer and the relationship between stem cell gene expression and clinical and pathological characteristics and prognosis of breast cancer. BACKGROUND: By now,stem cell differentiation-related genes and the relationship between the genes and clinic-pathological characteristics and prognosis of breast cancer are still unclear. MATERIALS AND METHODS: CD44+/CD24- tumor cells were selected by Flow cytometry. The differential expression of genes between CD44+/CD24- tumor cells and non-CD44+/CD24- tumor cells were detected by RT(2) Profiler™ PCR Array. The expression of stem cell gene Octamer-4 (Oct-4) was analyzed by immunohistochemistry staining and the relationship between Oct-4 and clinicopathological parameters of breast cancer was determined. RESULTS: Seven different genes including stem cell differentiation-related factors (CD44,Oct-4,and nestin),cell cycle regulators (APC and CDC2),and growth factors (HGF and TGF) were detected as significantly differently expressed between CD44+/CD24- tumor cells and non-CD44+/CD24- tumor cells. Oct-4 protein expressed significantly higher in cancerous tissues than adjacent-tumor tissues (P = 0.001). Moreover,we observed that the expression of Oct-4 protein was related to histological type,lymph node status and molecular type of breast cancer (P = 0.001,0.006,and 0.001,respectively). After survival analysis,the cases with highly expressed Oct-4 protein attained a significantly poorer postoperative disease-specific survival than those with none/low expressed Oct-4 protein (P = 0.001). In the Cox regression test,tumor size,histological type,disease stage,lymph node metastasis,Her-2 and Oct-4 were detected as the independent prognostic factors (P = 0.031,0.012,0.001,0.002,0.030,and 0.003,respectively). CONCLUSIONS: Oct-4 was highly expressed in CD44+/CD24- tumor cells,and may be a potential biomarker for the initiation,progression,and differentiation of breast cancer.
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