| Literature DB >> 27738343 |
Margherita Correnti1, Chiara Raggi1.
Abstract
Poor prognosis and high recurrence remain leading causes of primary liver cancer-associated mortality. The spread of circulating tumor cells (CTCs) in the blood plays a major role in the initiation of metastasis and tumor recurrence after surgery. Nevertheless, only a subset of CTCs can survive, migrate to distant sites and establish secondary tumors. Consistent with cancer stem cell (CSC) hypothesis, stem-like CTCs might represent a potential source for cancer relapse and distant metastasis. Thus, identification of stem-like metastasis-initiating CTC-subset may provide useful clinically prognostic information. This review will emphasize the most relevant findings of CTCs in the context of stem-like biology associated to liver carcinogenesis. In this view, the emerging field of stem-like CTCs may deliver substantial contribution in liver cancer field in order to move to personalized approaches for diagnosis, prognosis and therapy.Entities:
Keywords: cancer stem cells; circulating tumor cells; primary liver cancer
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 27738343 PMCID: PMC5351693 DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.12569
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncotarget ISSN: 1949-2553
Isolation of Liver CSCs
| Methods | Frequency (%) | Minimal Cell Number for Tumor Initiation | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| CD133 | 0-65 | 1000 | [ |
| CD44 | 0.1-1.9 | 100 | [ |
| OV6 | 0.2-3 | 5000 | [ |
| CD90 | 0-2.5 | 500 | [ |
| EpCAM | 0-99 | 200 | [ |
| CD13 | 0.5-1.6 | 500 | [ |
| CD24 | 0.5-97 | 500 | [ |
| CD47 | 9.3-81 | 500 | [ |
| Side Population | 0.25-1.2 | 100 | [ |
| Aldefluor | 1-55 | 500 | [ |
| Sphere Culture | 1-60 | 100 | [ |
Summary of different methods used to isolate liver CSCs. Frequency of isolated CSCs and their minimal cell number required for tumor initiation are indicated for each assay or marker used, with the respective references.
Stemness-Related Signalings in Liver CSCs
| Wnt | Embryonic development, cell fate determination, cell proliferation | [ |
| Notch | Cell-fate decision during embryonic development and adult life, regulator of self-renewing tissues | [ |
| Hedgehog | Key regulator of embryonic development | [ |
| TGF-β | Stem cell renewal and lineage specification; however has a controversial role on HCC genesis as a results from its effect on tumor microenvironment | [ |
| Bmi1 | Stem cell factor, proto-oncogene | [ |
| Sall4 | Key factors for maintenance of pluripotency and self renewal of embryonic stem cell potentially through the interaction with Oct4,Sox2, Nanog | [ |
| HDAC3 | Histone acetylation/deacetylation alters chromosome structure, affects transcription factor access to DNA thus impacts cell cycle progression and developmental events | [ |
| DNMT1 | DNA methylation patterns are essential for embryonic stem cell maintenance, mammalian development and normal functioning of adult organism | [ |
| miR-142-3p | Regulation of self-renewal capability of CD133+ cells | [ |
| miR-Let7 | Inhibited by Lin28, marker of human embryonic stem cells | [ |
| miR-181 | Regulation of Wnt/β-catenin pathway | [ |
Summary of stemness-related signalings with a role in liver CSC biology. Functions and relative references are indicated for each pathway, transcription factor, epigenetic regulator or miRNA.
Figure 1Different Approaches for CTC-Enrichment
There are different conventional approaches for CTC-enrichment, based on diverse biological features. A first group is based on physical properties of CTCs, such as size, density and electric charge. The second group is based on immunoaffinity. In this case positive-selective techniques use microbeads targeting CTC-specific antigen, whereas microbeads targeting red or white blood cells are used in negative-selective strategies. The third group is represented by microfluidic-based platforms that incorporate a combination of size- and immunoaffinity-based approaches, thus representing a combination of the previous two groups.
Figure 2Blood Dissemination of Different CTC-subtypes
Primary tumors, heterogeneously composed by bulk tumor cells and CSCs, can shed several CTCs, but only a minim percentage can survive in the bloodstream and only a minority is able to initiate metastatic tumor growth in a diverse organ. CTCs meet three main obstacles to their survival and dissemination: shear forces and collisions with leukocytes generated by blood flow, defense activity of immune system, absence of cell-matrix interactions that triggers an apoptotic process called anoikis. Mirroring complex heterogeneity of primary tumor cells, phenotypically distinct CTC-subtypes can co-exist in the circulation: epithelial, intermediate epithelial-mesenchymal, fully mesenchymal and stem-like CTCs. Moreover, CTCs with hybrid epithelial-mesenchymal phenotype can collectively migrate as CTC-clusters, instead of single cells. Emerging evidences suggest that only the subset of stem-like CTCs is endowed with ‘metastasis-initiating’ capability.
Figure 3A Continuum Between Different CTC-Subtypes
Among CTC-subpopulations, there are several phenotypes: epithelial CTCs that maintain the expression of original epithelial-specific markers (e.g. EpCAM and cytokeratins (CKs)); hybrid CTCs represented by cells in transition from epithelial to mesenchymal state, as demonstrating by the concomitant expression of both epithelial and mesenchymal markers; stem-like CTCs expressing both classical stem-like markers (such as CD90 and CD44) and mesenchymal-like markers (Vimentin and Twist); mesenchymal CTCs which show an upregulation of mesenchymal-like markers (such as Vimentin and Ncadherin). These subpopulations are not strictly distinct but a continuum between their different stages is probably existent.
Summary of CTC studies in PLC patients
| N° of Patients | Platform | Method for | CTC | CTC | Method for Characterization | Correlation/Outcome | References | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 36 PLC | na | Ficoll gradient + CD45 depletion and CD90 magnetic selection | CD45- CD90+ CD44+ | 0-6.9 % | Tumor size | [ | ||
| 34 PLC | na | Flow cytometry | CD45- CD90+ | 0-1.2 % | na | [ | ||
| 59 | CellSearch System | Positive immuno-magnetic selection | DAPI+ CD45- CK+ EpCAM+ | 0-5 / 7.5mL | na | OS, BCLC stage, vascular invasion, AFP level | [ | |
| 123 | 87 | CellSearch System | Positive immuno-magnetic selection | DAPI+ CD45- CK+ EpCAM+ | 1-34 / 7.5mL | Immunofluorescence | Recurrence, TTR, AFP level, vascular invasion, Edmondson stage | [ |
| 30 | RosetteSep Human CD45 Depletion Cocktail | Negative immuno-magnetic selection | CD45- | 1-34 / 7.5mL | qRT-PCR assays | Recurrence, TTR, AFP level, vascular invasion, Edmondson stage | ||
| 6 | na | Magnetic-activated cell sorting | CD45- EpCAM+ | 1-34 / 7.5mL | Recurrence, TTR, AFP level, vascular invasion, Edmondson stage | |||
| 21 | 1 | CellSearch System | Positive immuno-magnetic selection | DAPI+ CD45- CK+ EpCAM+ | 0.14 ± 0.65 / 7.5mL | na | na | [ |
| 19 | IsoFlux | Ficoll gradient + EpCAM-based magnetic selection on microfluidic device | Hoecht 33342+ CD45- | 127.52 ± 295.15 / 7.5mL | Immunofluorescence | na | ||
| 20 | CellSearch System | Positive immuno-magnetic selection | DAPI+ CD45- CK+ EpCAM+ | 0-79 / 7.5mL | Genome sequencing | AFP level, vascular invasion | [ | |
| 85 | AutoMACS Pro Separator | Ficoll gradient + ASGPR-based magnetic selection | DAPI+ CD45- ASGPR+ HepPar1+ | 19 ± 24 / 5mL | Immunofluorescence, FISH, qRT-PCR | Portal vein thrombus, Milan criteria, Edmondson/TNM stage, tumor size | [ | |
| 109 | na | Negative immuno-magnetic selection | DAPI+ CD45- CK+ pERK/Akt+ | 52 ± 23 / 5mL | Immunofluorescence | PFS, therapeutic response to Sorafenib | [ | |
| 299 | RosetteSep Human CD45 Depletion Cocktail | Negative immuno-magnetic selection | CD45- EpCAM+ | 41.2-54.5% | qRT-PCR for EpCAM | Treatment response, TTR, recurrence | [ | |
| 60 | MiniMACS Separator | Ficoll gradient + ASGPR-based magnetic selection | HSA+ DAPI+ CD45- ASGPR+ | na | Immunofluorescence | Recurrence, portal vein thrombus, Milan criteria, Edmondson/TNM stage, tumor size | [ | |
| 11 | RosetteSep Human CD45 Depletion Cocktail | Negative immuno-magnetic selection | DAPI+ CD45- panCK/EpCAM/ASGPR1+ | 5-275 CK+ / 1000 PBMC | Immunofluorescence | TTP, cirrhosis | [ | |
| 82 | na | Ficoll gradient | CD45- CD90+ CD44+ | 0-0.02% | Flow cytometry | Tumor size, TNM stage, recurrence | [ | |
| 96 | na | Ficoll gradient | Lin28B+ | na | qRT-PCR for Lin28B | Recurrence, tumor grade, tumor size, | [ | |
| 2 | na | Flow cytometry | CD45- ICAM1+ | 0.3 ± 0.02 % | Sphere assay, | OS, portal vein thrombus, ascites | [ | |
| 44 | ISET | Cell size | β-catenin mutated | na | Nested PCR for β-catenin | Tumor diffusion, portal tumor thrombosis, survival, Child-Pugh class, AFP level | [ | |
| 36 PLC | na | Ficoll gradient + CD45 depletion and CD90 magnetic selection | CD45- CD90+ CD44+ | 0-6.9 % | qRT-PCR | Tumor size | [ | |
| 34 PLC | na | Flow cytometry | CD45- CD90+ | 0-1.2 % | na | [ | ||
| 13 | CellSearch System | Positive immuno-magnetic selection | DAPI+ CD45- CK+ EpCAM+ | 2.25 ± 1.54 / 7.5mL | na | na | [ | |
| 88 | CellSearch System | Positive immuno-magnetic selection | DAPI+ CD45- CK+ EpCAM+ | na | na | Tumor size, TNM stage, | [ | |
Summary of CTC-studies conducted in PLC patients. Number of patients enrolled, platforms and methods used for CTC isolation and characterization, phenotype and number of isolated CTCs and correlation with clinical and pathological parameters or outcome of patient are reported, together with the relative references.