De Giorgi U et al. (MAY 2011)
Cancer biology & therapy 11 9 812--5
Mesenchymal stem cells expressing GD2 and CD271 correlate with breast cancer-initiating cells in bone marrow.
Purpose: The bone marrow microenvironment is considered a critical component in the dissemination and fate of cancer cells in the metastatic process. We explored the possible correlation between bone marrow mesenchymal stem cells (BM-MSC) and disseminated breast cancer-initiating cells (BCIC) in primary breast cancer patients. Experimental design: Bone marrow mononuclear cells (BM-MNC) were collected at the time of primary surgery in 12 breast cancer patients. BM-MNC was immunophenotyped and BCIC was defined as epithelial cells (CD326+CD45-) with a stem-like" phenotype (CD44+CD24low/-
View Publication
LaMarca HL and Rosen JM (SEP 2008)
Endocrinology 149 9 4317--21
Minireview: hormones and mammary cell fate--what will I become when I grow up?
Systemic hormones are key regulators of postnatal mammary gland development and play an important role in the etiology and treatment of breast cancer. Mammary ductal morphogenesis is controlled by circulating hormones,and these same hormones are also critical mediators of mammary stem cell fate decisions. Recent studies have helped further our understanding of the origin,specification,and fate of mammary stem cells during postnatal development. Here we review recent studies on the involvement of hormone receptors and several transcription factors in mammary stem/progenitor cell differentiation and lineage commitment.
View Publication
Teissedre B et al. (JAN 2009)
PloS one 4 2 e4537
MMTV-Wnt1 and -DeltaN89beta-catenin induce canonical signaling in distinct progenitors and differentially activate Hedgehog signaling within mammary tumors.
Canonical Wnt/beta-catenin signaling regulates stem/progenitor cells and,when perturbed,induces many human cancers. A significant proportion of human breast cancer is associated with loss of secreted Wnt antagonists and mice expressing MMTV-Wnt1 and MMTV-DeltaN89beta-catenin develop mammary adenocarcinomas. Many studies have assumed these mouse models of breast cancer to be equivalent. Here we show that MMTV-Wnt1 and MMTV-DeltaN89beta-catenin transgenes induce tumors with different phenotypes. Using axin2/conductin reporter genes we show that MMTV-Wnt1 and MMTV-DeltaN89beta-catenin activate canonical Wnt signaling within distinct cell-types. DeltaN89beta-catenin activated signaling within a luminal subpopulation scattered along ducts that exhibited a K18(+)ER(-)PR(-)CD24(high)CD49f(low) profile and progenitor properties. In contrast,MMTV-Wnt1 induced canonical signaling in K14(+) basal cells with CD24/CD49f profiles characteristic of two distinct stem/progenitor cell-types. MMTV-Wnt1 produced additional profound effects on multiple cell-types that correlated with focal activation of the Hedgehog pathway. We document that large melanocytic nevi are a hitherto unreported hallmark of early hyperplastic Wnt1 glands. These nevi formed along the primary mammary ducts and were associated with Hedgehog pathway activity within a subset of melanocytes and surrounding stroma. Hh pathway activity also occurred within tumor-associated stromal and K14(+)/p63(+) subpopulations in a manner correlated with Wnt1 tumor onset. These data show MMTV-Wnt1 and MMTV-DeltaN89beta-catenin induce canonical signaling in distinct progenitors and that Hedgehog pathway activation is linked to melanocytic nevi and mammary tumor onset arising from excess Wnt1 ligand. They further suggest that Hedgehog pathway activation maybe a critical component and useful indicator of breast tumors arising from unopposed Wnt1 ligand.
View Publication
Law JH et al. (JAN 2010)
PloS one 5 9
Molecular decoy to the Y-box binding protein-1 suppresses the growth of breast and prostate cancer cells whilst sparing normal cell viability.
The Y-box binding protein-1 (YB-1) is an oncogenic transcription/translation factor that is activated by phosphorylation at S102 whereby it induces the expression of growth promoting genes such as EGFR and HER-2. We recently illustrated by an in vitro kinase assay that a novel peptide to YB-1 was highly phosphorylated by the serine/threonine p90 S6 kinases RSK-1 and RSK-2,and to a lesser degree PKCα and AKT. Herein,we sought to develop this decoy cell permeable peptide (CPP) as a cancer therapeutic. This 9-mer was designed as an interference peptide that would prevent endogenous YB-1(S102) phosphorylation based on molecular docking. In cancer cells,the CPP blocked P-YB-1(S102) and down-regulated both HER-2 and EGFR transcript level and protein expression. Further,the CPP prevented YB-1 from binding to the EGFR promoter in a gel shift assay. Notably,the growth of breast (SUM149,MDA-MB-453,AU565) and prostate (PC3,LNCap) cancer cells was inhibited by ∼90% with the CPP. Further,treatment with this peptide enhanced sensitivity and overcame resistance to trastuzumab in cells expressing amplified HER-2. By contrast,the CPP had no inhibitory effect on the growth of normal immortalized breast epithelial (184htert) cells,primary breast epithelial cells,nor did it inhibit differentiation of hematopoietic progenitors. These data collectively suggest that the CPP is a novel approach to suppressing the growth of cancer cells while sparing normal cells and thereby establishes a proof-of-concept that blocking YB-1 activation is a new course of cancer therapeutics.
View Publication
Wang H et al. (JAN 2012)
Journal of translational medicine 10 1 167
Oncolytic vaccinia virus GLV-1h68 strain shows enhanced replication in human breast cancer stem-like cells in comparison to breast cancer cells.
BACKGROUND: Recent data suggest that cancer stem cells (CSCs) play an important role in cancer,as these cells possess enhanced tumor-forming capabilities and are responsible for relapses after apparently curative therapies have been undertaken. Hence,novel cancer therapies will be needed to test for both tumor regression and CSC targeting. The use of oncolytic vaccinia virus (VACV) represents an attractive anti-tumor approach and is currently under evaluation in clinical trials. The purpose of this study was to demonstrate whether VACV does kill CSCs that are resistant to irradiation and chemotherapy. METHODS: Cancer stem-like cells were identified and separated from the human breast cancer cell line GI-101A by virtue of increased aldehyde dehydrogenase 1 (ALDH1) activity as assessed by the ALDEFLUOR assay and cancer stem cell-like features such as chemo-resistance,irradiation-resistance and tumor-initiating were confirmed in cell culture and in animal models. VACV treatments were applied to both ALDEFLUOR-positive cells in cell culture and in xenograft tumors derived from these cells. Moreover,we identified and isolated CD44(+)CD24(+)ESA(+) cells from GI-101A upon an epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT). These cells were similarly characterized both in cell culture and in animal models. RESULTS: We demonstrated for the first time that the oncolytic VACV GLV-1h68 strain replicated more efficiently in cells with higher ALDH1 activity that possessed stem cell-like features than in cells with lower ALDH1 activity. GLV-1h68 selectively colonized and eventually eradicated xenograft tumors originating from cells with higher ALDH1 activity. Furthermore,GLV-1h68 also showed preferential replication in CD44(+)CD24(+)ESA(+) cells derived from GI-101A upon an EMT induction as well as in xenograft tumors originating from these cells that were more tumorigenic than CD44(+)CD24(-)ESA(+) cells. CONCLUSIONS: Taken together,our findings indicate that GLV-1h68 efficiently replicates and kills cancer stem-like cells. Thus,GLV-1h68 may become a promising agent for eradicating both primary and metastatic tumors,especially tumors harboring cancer stem-like cells that are resistant to chemo and/or radiotherapy and may be responsible for recurrence of tumors.
View Publication
Reuben JM et al. (JUL 2011)
European journal of cancer (Oxford,England : 1990) 47 10 1527--36
Primary breast cancer patients with high risk clinicopathologic features have high percentages of bone marrow epithelial cells with ALDH activity and CD44-CD24lo cancer stem cell phenotype.
BACKGROUND: Cancer stem cells (CSCs) are purported to be epithelial tumour cells expressing CD44(+)CD24(lo) that exhibit aldehyde dehydrogenase activity (Aldefluor(+)). We hypothesised that if CSCs are responsible for tumour dissemination,disseminated cells in the bone marrow (BM) would be positive for putative breast CSC markers. Therefore,we assessed the presence of Aldefluor(+) epithelial (CD326(+)CD45(dim)) cells for the presence of the CD44(+)CD24(lo) phenotype in BM of patients with primary breast cancer (PBC). METHODS: BM aspirates were collected at the time of surgery from 66 patients with PBC. Thirty patients received neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NACT) prior to aspiration. BM was analysed for Aldefluor(+) epithelial cells with or without CD44(+)CD24(lo) expression by flow cytometry. BM aspirates from three healthy donors (HD) were subjected to identical processing and analyses and served as controls. RESULTS: Patients with triple-receptor-negative (TN) tumours had a significantly higher median percentage of CD44(+)CD24(lo) CSC within Aldefluor(+) epithelial cell population than patients with other immunohistochemical subtypes (P=0.018). Patients with TN tumours or with pN2 or higher pathologic nodal status were more likely to have a proportion of CD44(+)CD24(lo) CSC within Aldefluor(+) epithelial cell population above the highest level of HD. Furthermore,patients who received NACT were more likely to have percentages of Aldefluor(+) epithelial cells than the highest level of HD (P=0.004). CONCLUSION: The percentage of CD44(+)CD24(lo) CSC in the BM is higher in PBC patients with high risk tumour features. The selection or enrichment of Aldefluor(+) epithelial cells by NACT may represent an opportunity to target these cells with novel therapies.
View Publication
Calcagno AM et al. (NOV 2010)
Journal of the National Cancer Institute 102 21 1637--52
Prolonged drug selection of breast cancer cells and enrichment of cancer stem cell characteristics.
BACKGROUND: Cancer stem cells are presumed to have virtually unlimited proliferative and self-renewal abilities and to be highly resistant to chemotherapy,a feature that is associated with overexpression of ATP-binding cassette transporters. We investigated whether prolonged continuous selection of cells for drug resistance enriches cultures for cancer stem-like cells. METHODS: Cancer stem cells were defined as CD44+/CD24? cells that could self-renew (ie,generate cells with the tumorigenic CD44+/CD24? phenotype),differentiate,invade,and form tumors in vivo. We used doxorubicin-selected MCF-7/ADR cells,weakly tumorigenic parental MCF-7 cells,and MCF-7/MDR,an MCF-7 subline with forced expression of ABCB1 protein. Cells were examined for cell surface markers and side-population fractions by microarray and flow cytometry,with in vitro invasion assays,and for ability to form mammospheres. Xenograft tumors were generated in mice to examine tumorigenicity (n = 52). The mRNA expression of multidrug resistance genes was examined in putative cancer stem cells and pathway analysis of statistically significantly differentially expressed genes was performed. All statistical tests were two-sided. RESULTS: Pathway analysis showed that MCF-7/ADR cells express mRNAs from ABCB1 and other genes also found in breast cancer stem cells (eg,CD44,TGFB1,and SNAI1). MCF-7/ADR cells were highly invasive,formed mammospheres,and were tumorigenic in mice. In contrast to parental MCF-7 cells,more than 30% of MCF-7/ADR cells had a CD44+/CD24? phenotype,could self-renew,and differentiate (ie,produce CD44+/CD24? and CD44+/CD24+ cells) and overexpressed various multidrug resistance-linked genes (including ABCB1,CCNE1,and MMP9). MCF-7/ADR cells were statistically significantly more invasive in Matrigel than parental MCF-7 cells (MCF-7 cells = 0.82 cell per field and MCF-7/ADR = 7.51 cells per field,difference = 6.69 cells per field,95% confidence interval = 4.82 to 8.55 cells per field,P textless .001). No enrichment in the CD44+/CD24? or CD133+ population was detected in MCF-7/MDR. CONCLUSION: The cell population with cancer stem cell characteristics increased after prolonged continuous selection for doxorubicin resistance.
View Publication
Stingl J et al. (MAR 2006)
Nature 439 7079 993--7
Purification and unique properties of mammary epithelial stem cells.
Elucidation of the cellular and molecular mechanisms that maintain mammary epithelial tissue integrity is of broad interest and paramount to the design of more effective treatments for breast cancer. Evidence from both in vitro and in vivo experiments suggests that mammary cell differentiation is a hierarchical process originating in an uncommitted stem cell with self-renewal potential. However,analysis of the properties and regulation of mammary stem cells has been limited by a lack of methods for their prospective isolation. Here we report the use of multi-parameter cell sorting and limiting dilution transplant analysis to demonstrate the purification of a rare subset of adult mouse mammary cells that are able individually to regenerate an entire mammary gland within 6 weeks in vivo while simultaneously executing up to ten symmetrical self-renewal divisions. These mammary stem cells are phenotypically distinct from and give rise to mammary epithelial progenitor cells that produce adherent colonies in vitro. The mammary stem cells are also a rapidly cycling population in the normal adult and have molecular features indicative of a basal position in the mammary epithelium.
View Publication
Guo H-B et al. (DEC 2010)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 107 49 21116--21
Specific posttranslational modification regulates early events in mammary carcinoma formation.
The expression of an enzyme,GnT-V,that catalyzes a specific posttranslational modification of a family of glycoproteins,namely a branched N-glycan,is transcriptionally up-regulated during breast carcinoma oncogenesis. To determine the molecular basis of how early events in breast carcinoma formation are regulated by GnT-V,we studied both the early stages of mammary tumor formation by using 3D cell culture and a her-2 transgenic mouse mammary tumor model. Overexpression of GnT-V in MCF-10A mammary epithelial cells in 3D culture disrupted acinar morphogenesis with impaired hollow lumen formation,an early characteristic of mammary neoplastic transformation. The disrupted acinar morphogenesis of mammary tumor cells in 3D culture caused by her-2 expression was reversed in tumors that lacked GnT-V expression. Moreover,her-2-induced mammary tumor onset was significantly delayed in the GnT-V null tumors,evidence that the lack of the posttranslational modification catalyzed by GnT-V attenuated tumor formation. Inhibited activation of both PKB and ERK signaling pathways was observed in GnT-V null tumor cells. The proportion of tumor-initiating cells (TICs) in the mammary tumors from GnT-V null mice was significantly reduced compared with controls,and GnT-V null TICs displayed a reduced ability to form secondary tumors in NOD/SCID mice. These results demonstrate that GnT-V expression and its branched glycan products effectively modulate her-2-mediated signaling pathways that,in turn,regulate the relative proportion of tumor initiating cells and the latency of her-2-driven tumor onset.
View Publication
Petersen OW and Polyak K (MAY 2010)
Cold Spring Harbor perspectives in biology 2 5 a003160
Stem cells in the human breast.
The origins of the epithelial cells participating in the development,tissue homeostasis,and cancer of the human breast are poorly understood. However,emerging evidence suggests a role for adult tissue-specific stem cells in these processes. In a hierarchical manner,these generate the two main mammary cell lineages,producing an increasing number of cells with distinct properties. Understanding the biological characteristics of human breast stem cells and their progeny is crucial in attempts to compare the features of normal stem cells and cancer precursor cells and distinguish these from nonprecursor cells and cells from the bulk of a tumor. A historical overview of research on human breast stem cells in primary tissue and in culture reveals the progress that has been made in this area,whereas a focus on the cell-of-origin and reprogramming that occurs during neoplastic conversion provides insight into the enigmatic way in which human breast cancers are skewed toward the luminal epithelial lineage.
View Publication
Liu S and Wicha MS (SEP 2010)
Journal of clinical oncology : official journal of the American Society of Clinical Oncology 28 25 4006--12
Targeting breast cancer stem cells.
There is increasing evidence that many cancers,including breast cancer,contain populations of cells that display stem-cell properties. These breast cancer stem cells,by virtue of their relative resistance to radiation and cytotoxic chemotherapy,may contribute to treatment resistance and relapse. The elucidation of pathways that regulate these cells has led to the identification of potential therapeutic targets. A number of agents capable of targeting breast cancer stem cells in preclinical models are currently entering clinical trials. Assessment of the efficacy of the agents will require development of innovative clinical trial designs with appropriate biologic and clinical end points. The effective targeting of breast cancer stem cells has the potential to significantly improve outcome for women with both early-stage and advanced breast cancer.
View Publication
Chen J and Chen Z-L (MAR 2010)
Chinese journal of cancer 29 3 265--9
Technology update for the sorting and identification of breast cancer stem cells.
Breast cancer stem cells are a group of undifferentiated cells with self-renewal and multidifferentiation potential. Chemotherapeutic and radiotherapeutic resistance,hypoxic resistance,high tumorigenicity,high cell invasion,and metastatic abilities are characteristics of these cells,which are responsible for breast cancer recurrence. Therefore,the correct sorting and identification of breast cancer stem cells is a primary step for research in this field. This article briefly describes the recent progress on sorting and identification technologies for breast cancer stem cells. Sorting technologies include the side population technique,technologies that depend on cell surface markers,ALDEFLUOR assays,and in situ detection. Identification technologies include mammosphere cultures,limited dilution in vitro,and in-vivo animal models. This review provides an important reference for breast cancer stem cell research,which will explore new methods for the treatment of patients with breast cancer.
View Publication