| Literature DB >> 27573059 |
Loredana G Marcu1,2, David Marcu1.
Abstract
Head and neck cancers (HNC), like most solid tumours, contain a subpopulation of cancer stem cells (CSC) that are commonly responsible for treatment failure. Conventional therapies are unsuccessful in controlling CSCs, thus novel, targeting therapies are needed. A promising agent is ATRA (All-trans-retinoic acid) that was shown to induce CSC differentiation, cell cycle redistribution and CSCs radiosensitisation. To add to the limited data, this work simulated the effects of ATRA on a virtual HNC and evaluated tumour response to radiotherapy. A Monte Carlo technique was employed to grow a HNC consisting of all lineages of cancer cells. The biologically realistic input parameters led to a pre-treatment CSC population of 5.9%. The Linear Quadratic model was employed to simulate radiotherapy. ATRA-induced differentiation, cell arrest and apoptosis were modelled, based on literature data. While the effect of differentiation was marginal, the strongest influence on CSC subpopulation was displayed by ATRA's cell arrest effect via an exponential behaviour of the dose-response curve. The apoptotic effect induced by ATRA shows linear correlation between the percentage of apoptotic cells and dose required to eradicate CSCs. In conclusion, ATRA is a potent CSC-targeting agent with viable impact on tumour control when combined with radiotherapy.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27573059 PMCID: PMC5004146 DOI: 10.1038/srep32332
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1ATRA and its potential properties as indicated by in vitro and in vivo studies.
Figure 2The impact of symmetrical division probability on CSC subpopulation in a moderately hypoxic HNC.
Figure 3Survival curves of the CSC subpopulations under hyperfractionated radiotherapy and various ATRA effects for 0.1% SDP.
Figure 4The effect of differentiation when combined with cell arrest without apoptosis (ATRA 1+2) and with apoptosis (ATRA 1+2+3).
Figure 5The effect of cell arrest induced by ATRA on the CSC subpopulation.
Figure 6The effect of apoptotic death caused by ATRA on the CSC subpopulation.
Figure 7Comparison of the ATRA effects on CSCs.
Tumour growth parameters.
| Tumour growth parameters | Model values |
|---|---|
| Input parameters | |
| Length of S phase | 11 h |
| Mean cell cycle time (range) | 33 h (20 – 60h) |
| Duration (proportions) of cell cycle phases | M:7%; G1:40%; S:30%; G2:23% |
| Cell loss factor | 85% |
| Model-derived parameters | |
| Volume doubling time | 52 d |
| Labelling index | 4.7% |
| Cell division rate (24h) | 1.3% |
| Pre-treatment probability of CSC symmetrical division | 1.9% |
| Pre-treatment percentage of CSCs | 5.42% |