| Literature DB >> 21515906 |
Loic P Deleyrolle1, Angus Harding, Kathleen Cato, Florian A Siebzehnrubl, Maryam Rahman, Hassan Azari, Sarah Olson, Brian Gabrielli, Geoffrey Osborne, Angelo Vescovi, Brent A Reynolds.
Abstract
Individual tumour cells display diverse functional behaviours in terms of proliferation rate, cell-cell interactions, metastatic potential and sensitivity to therapy. Moreover, sequencing studies have demonstrated surprising levels of genetic diversity between individual patient tumours of the same type. Tumour heterogeneity presents a significant therapeutic challenge as diverse cell types within a tumour can respond differently to therapies, and inter-patient heterogeneity may prevent the development of general treatments for cancer. One strategy that may help overcome tumour heterogeneity is the identification of tumour sub-populations that drive specific disease pathologies for the development of therapies targeting these clinically relevant sub-populations. Here, we have identified a dye-retaining brain tumour population that displays all the hallmarks of a tumour-initiating sub-population. Using a limiting dilution transplantation assay in immunocompromised mice, label-retaining brain tumour cells display elevated tumour-initiation properties relative to the bulk population. Importantly, tumours generated from these label-retaining cells exhibit all the pathological features of the primary disease. Together, these findings confirm dye-retaining brain tumour cells exhibit tumour-initiation ability and are therefore viable targets for the development of therapeutics targeting this sub-population.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21515906 PMCID: PMC3097894 DOI: 10.1093/brain/awr081
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Brain ISSN: 0006-8950 Impact factor: 13.501