| Literature DB >> 21542915 |
Hai-Guang Liu1, Chong Chen, Han Yang, Yi-Fei Pan, Xiao-Hua Zhang.
Abstract
Emerging evidence suggests that cancer stem cells account for the initiation and progression of cancer. While many types of cancer stem cells with specific markers have been isolated and identified, a variety of differences among them began to be appreciated. Cancer stem cells are hierarchical populations that consist of precancerous stem cells, primary cancer stem cells, migrating cancer stem cells and chemoradioresistant cancer stem cells, playing different roles in cancer initiation and progression. Here we propose a new concept "horizontal hierarchy of cancer stem cells" to distinguish them from vertical hierarchy cancer stem cells, cancer transient-amplifying cells and cancer differentiated cells, and summarize our current understanding of these subsets of cancer stem cells with the aim to open up novel therapeutic strategies for cancer based on this understanding.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21542915 PMCID: PMC3096925 DOI: 10.1186/1479-5876-9-50
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Transl Med ISSN: 1479-5876 Impact factor: 5.531
Figure 1The progression of cancer stem cells and their corresponding pathological process. Transformed normal stem cells (SCs), progenitors with self-renewal capacity and differentiated cells after reprogramming are the potential origin of precancerous stem cells (pre-CSCs), whose corresponding pathological process is precancerous condition. Transformation from precancerous stem cells to primary cancer stem cells (pri-CSCs) is a crucial step of cancer initiation. Upon acquiring migrating capacity, primary cancer stem cells transform to migrating cancer stem cells (mig-CSCs) and metastasize to distant organs and cause metastatic cancer. In order to escape from chemoradiotherapy, some of primary cancer stem cells may develop into chemoresistant cancer stem cells (cr-CSCs) and radioresistant cancer stem cells (rr-CSCs). Some transformation steps are marked with gray arrows to indicate that they are speculative with no direct evidence up to date.
Cancer stem cells with specific markers
| Type of cancer | Specific markers | References |
|---|---|---|
| AML | CD34+CD38-Lin- | [ |
| AML | CD123+ | [ |
| AML | CD47+ | [ |
| Breast cancer | CD24-CD44+Lin- | [ |
| Breast cancer | ALDH1+ | [ |
| Brain tumors | CD133+ | [ |
| Glioblastoma | SSEA-1+ | [ |
| Glioblastoma | A2B5+ | [ |
| Prostate cancer | a2β1hiCD133+ | [ |
| Prostate cancer | Lin-Sca-1+CD49fhigh | [ |
| Bladder cancer | ALDH1+ | [ |
| Lung cancer | SP-C+CCA+ | [ |
| Lung cancer | CD133+ | [ |
| Lung cancer | ALDH1+ | [ |
| Melanoma | CD20+MCAM+ | [ |
| Melanoma | CD133+ABCG2+ | [ |
| Melanoma | MDR1+ | [ |
| Melanoma | ABCG5+ | [ |
| Melanoma | CD271+ | [ |
| Melanoma | JARID1B+ | [ |
| Colon cancer | CD133+ | [ |
| Colon cancer | Lgr5+ | [ |
| Colon cancer | ALDH1+ | [ |
| Colorectal cancer | CD44+ESAhiCD166+ | [ |
| Colorectal cancer | CD26+ | [ |
| Intestinal cancer | Lgr5+ | [ |
| Intestinal cancer | CD133+ | [ |
| Pancreatic cancer | CD44+CD24+ESA+ | [ |
| Pancreatic cancer | CD133+ | [ |
| HNSCC | CD44+ | [ |
| HNSCC | ALDH1+ | [ |
| B-precursor ALL | CD34+CD38+ CD19+; CD34+CD38-CD19+ | [ |
| Ovarian cancer | CD44+CD117+ | [ |
| Ovarian cancer | CD133+ | [ |
| Endometrial tumors | CD133+ | [ |
| Liver cancer | CD90+ | [ |
| Liver cancer | CD133+ | [ |
| Liver cancer | EpCAM+ | [ |
| Renal carcinomas | CD105+ | [ |
| Medulloblastoma | CD15+ | [ |
| Gastric cancer | CD44+ | [ |
| Osteosarcoma | Oct-4+ | [ |
AML: acute myeloid leukaemia; ALDH: aldehyde dehydrogenase; SP-C: surfactant protein C; CCA: also known as CC10 or CCSP; MCAM: melanoma cell adhesion molecule; ABCG: ATP-binding cassette superfamily G member; MDR: multi-drug resistance protein; ESA: epithelial specific antigen; HNSCC: head and neck squamous cell carcinoma; ALL: acute lymphocytic leukaemia.