| Literature DB >> 22570529 |
Tian Xia1, Han Jiang, Chenrui Li, Mei Tian, Hong Zhang.
Abstract
Cancer remains a major public health problem in many countries. It was found to contain a subset of cancer stem cells (CSCs) that are capable of proliferation and self-renewal, and differentiation into various types of cancer cells. CSCs often display characteristics of chemotherapy resistance and radiotherapy resistance. Numerous putative biomarkers of CSCs are currently identified including CD133, CD44, CD24, ALDH (aldehyde dehydrogenase), and ABCG2. Interestingly, no single marker is exclusively expressed by CSCs. Thus, the various combinations of different biomarkers will be possible to identify CSCs, and considerable work is being done to recognize new ones. In order to demonstrate the mechanisms of resistance and response to therapy and predict the outcome as well as prognosis, the ways to track and identify CSCs will be extremely important. The technologies of molecular imaging will reveal mechanisms of cancer progression and provide visual targets for novel therapeutics. Limited studies were investigated on the detection of various types of CSCs by molecular imaging. Although the tracking of circulating CSCs is still hampered by technological challenges, personalized diagnosis and therapies of cancers are expected to be established based on increased understanding of molecular imaging of cancer stem-like cells biomarkers.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22570529 PMCID: PMC3335324 DOI: 10.1155/2012/420364
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biomed Biotechnol ISSN: 1110-7243
Figure 1Three phenotypes of CSCs: self-renew, multipotentiality, and tumor-initiating capacity. Self-renewal: single-cell culture sphere-forming assay. Differentiation: flow cytometric analysis of differentiation markers and loss of stem cell markers. Tumor-initiating properties were investigated by injection of CSCs in NOD/SCID mice. The most crucial standard for a CSC is its ability to reinitiate a serially transplantable tumor that recapitulates the original heterogeneity and tumor histology. Using this standard, many so-called CSCs reported so far are based on correlative studied rather than being true CSCs.
Comparison of the biomarkers of CSC and normal stem cell.
| Cancer type | CSC marker | Normal stem cell | Marker | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Acute myelogenous leukemia | CD34+CD38− | Mouse embryonic stem cell | Oct-4 | [ |
| SSEA-1 | [ | |||
| Glioma | Nestin, HOXD9 | Human embryonic stem cell | SSEA-3 | [ |
| Breast | ALDH1, TAZ CD44+/CD24−/lin− | TRA-1-60 | [ | |
| Colon | CD166 | Neural stem cell | CD133 | [ |
| Prostate | TRA-1-60 | Nestin | [ | |
| Pancreas | ESA | Hepatic stem cell | EpCAM | [ |
| Liver | CD90, EpCAM | Mammary stem cell | CD49f+EpCAMneg-low | [ |
| Breast, liver, and pancreas | ALDH | ALDH1 | [ | |
| Glioma, lung, colon, pancreas, and liver | CD133 | |||
| Pancreas, colon, and liver | CD24, CD44 | |||
| Breast, pancreas, and lung | ABCG2 |
CD49f: α6 integrin; Lin: Lineage surface antigen; SSEA: stage-specific embryonic antigen.
Molecular imaging in tracking tumor stem-like cells.
| Imaging agent | Molecular imaging | Biomarker | Model |
|---|---|---|---|
| 64Cu-ATSM | PET | CD 133 | Colon cancer |
| Antibody magnetic microbead | MRI | ESA | Liver cancer |
| HA-MNCs | MRI | CD44 | Breast cancer |
| Antibody AC133.1 | FMT | CD133 | CD133-overexpressing glioblastoma |
| Optical bifusion reporter genes | BLI | CD44 | Breast cancer |
| GSC-targeting peptide | BLI | Nestin | Glioma |
| 199b Luc-1 | BLI | CD133 | Medulloblastoma tumor |
| Adv5-199b | PET/CT |
Figure 2GSCT selectively binds Nestin-positive tumor cells in human GBM tissues. Paraffin-embedded human GBM tissue sections were stained with a biotinylated-GSCT (B-GSCT) peptide (Green) and Nestin antibody (Red). This immunofluorescence analysis revealed that most B-GSCT peptide-targeting tumor cells are colocalized with Nestin-positive tumor cells [27]. With reprint permission from Elsevier.
Figure 3Homing of GSCT peptide to GSC-derived tumors in vivo [27]. (a) In vivo biodistribution of GSCT peptide was examined by intravenous injection of Q-dot 800-conjugated GSCT (QGSCT) or control peptide in mice bearing subcutaneous tumors derived from the injection of Id4-driven mouse GSCs. Whole-body biofluorescence images were obtained 24 h after injection of Q-GSCT and Q-control peptides. (b) In vivo biodistribution of Q-Dot 800-conjugated GSCT or control peptide in orthotopic brain tumor models. Whole-body biofluorescence images were obtained 4 days after injection of Q-GSCT and Q-control peptides in mice bearing orthotopic brain tumors derived from the injection of Id4-driven mouse GSCs. (c) Fluorescence images of Q-GSCT peptides in tumors and organs extracted from mice bearing subcutaneous tumors are shown in Figure 3(a). (d) Fluorescence images of Q-GSCT peptides in brains extracted from mice bearing orthotopic tumors are shown in Figure 3(b). With reprint permission from Elsevier.
Figure 4Paradigm of the application of molecular imaging in CSCs detection based on cancer stem cell model. Red and blue indicate cancer stem cells (CSCs) and non-CSCs, respectively.