| Literature DB >> 27766946 |
Sara S Franco1,2, Karolina Szczesna2, Maria S Iliou3, Mohammed Al-Qahtani4, Ali Mobasheri4,5, Julianna Kobolák2, András Dinnyés6,7,8.
Abstract
Cancer cells, stem cells and cancer stem cells have for a long time played a significant role in the biomedical sciences. Though cancer therapy is more effective than it was a few years ago, the truth is that still none of the current non-surgical treatments can cure cancer effectively. The reason could be due to the subpopulation called "cancer stem cells" (CSCs), being defined as those cells within a tumour that have properties of stem cells: self-renewal and the ability for differentiation into multiple cell types that occur in tumours.The phenomenon of CSCs is based on their resistance to many of the current cancer therapies, which results in tumour relapse. Although further investigation regarding CSCs is still needed, there is already evidence that these cells may play an important role in the prognosis of cancer, progression and therapeutic strategy. Therefore, long-term patient survival may depend on the elimination of CSCs. Consequently, isolation of pure CSC populations or reprogramming of cancer cells into CSCs, from cancer cell lines or primary tumours, would be a useful tool to gain an in-depth knowledge about heterogeneity and plasticity of CSC phenotypes and therefore carcinogenesis. Herein, we will discuss current CSC models, methods used to characterize CSCs, candidate markers, characteristic signalling pathways and clinical applications of CSCs. Some examples of CSC-specific treatments that are currently in early clinical phases will also be presented in this review.Entities:
Keywords: Cancer; Cancer stem cells; Cancer therapy; In vitro models
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27766946 PMCID: PMC5073996 DOI: 10.1186/s12885-016-2774-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Cancer ISSN: 1471-2407 Impact factor: 4.430
Fig. 1Most common cell surface markers currently used to identify CSC subpopulations from different types of cancer
Summary of in vitro cancer stem cell models based on cancer cell reprogramming
| Type of cancer | Species | Cancer cell line/tumour | Reprogramming factors | Characterization of the pluripotency state | Teratoma ? | Chimera ? | Tumour description | Ref. | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gastro intestinal cancer | Pancreatic cancer | Human | Primary solid tumour from patients | Oct4, Sox2, Klf4, c-Myc | Nanog, Oct4, Rex1, Ssea-4, sphere formation and differentiation into three germ layers | Yes | - | PanIN precursors to PDAC, evolution to the invasive stage | [ |
| Liver cancer | Human | Cancer cell line PLC/PRF/5 | mir-302 | Nanog Oct4 Sox2, Rex1, alkaline phosphatase activity, sphere formation and differentiation into three germ layers | - | - | - | [ | |
| Human | Oct4, Sox2, Klf4, c-Myc | Nanog, Oct4, Klf4, Rex1, Ssea-4, Tra-1-60, sphere formation and differentiation into three germ layers | - | - | - | [ | |||
| Oct4, Sox2, Klf4, c-Myc | c-Myc, Sox2, Oct4, Klf4, Nanog, Rex1, Tra-1-60, Tra-1-81, Tra-2-49, Ssea-4, multi-differentiation potential into three germ layers | - | - | - | [ | ||||
| Cholangio | Human | Cancer cell line HuCC-T1 | - | Enhanced tumorigenicity | |||||
| Colorectal cancer | Human | Cancer cell line DLD-1 | - | - | - | ||||
| Oct4, Sox2, Klf4, c-Myc | Nanog, Oct3/4, Sox2, Klf4, c-Myc, Rex1, Ssea-4, Tra-1-60, Tra-1-81, Tra-2-49, sphere formation and differentiation into three germ layers | - | - | - | [ | ||||
| Human | Cancer cell lines SW480 and SW620 | Oct4, Sox2, Klf4, c-Myc | Sox2, Oct4, Lin28, sphere formation | - | - | Enhanced tumorigenicity | [ | ||
| Human | Cancer cell line SW480 | Oct4, Sox2, Klf4 | Sphere formation | - | - | Enhanced tumorigenicity | [ | ||
| Leukaemia | Human | Cancer cell line KBM7 | Oct4, Sox2, Klf4, c-Myc | Oct4, Sox2, Rex1, FGF4, TDGF1, Nanog, GDF3, Lin28, Zic3, CD9, Tra-1-81, alkaline phosphatase activity, sphere formation | Yes | - | - | [ | |
| Human | CD34+ cells from patients with CML | Oct4, Sox2, Klf4, c-Myc | Oct4, Sox2, Klf4, Nanog, Lin28, Rex1, Ssea-4, Tra-1-60 | Yes | - | - | [ | ||
| Human | Bone marrow mononuclear cells from patient with CML | Oct4, Sox2, Klf4, c-Myc, Nanog, Lin28, | Oct4, Sox2, Nanog, Lin28, GDF3, Rex1, GDF3, Ssea-3, Ssea-4, TrA-1-60, Tra-1-81, alkaline phosphatase activity | Yes | - | - | [ | ||
| Lung cancer | Human | Cancer cell lines H358 and H460 | Oct4, Sox2, Klf4, c-Myc | Nanog, Sox2, FGF4, Oct4, Tra-1-60, alkaline phosphatase activity, telomerase activity, sphere formation and differentiation into three germ layers | - | - | - | [ | |
| Cancer cell line A549 | Oct4, Sox2, Nanog, Lin28, HIF | Alkaline phosphatase activity (partial reprogramming) | - | - | Highly aggressive malignant solid tumors, high mitotic index, local invansiveness | [ | |||
| Oct4, Nanog | Oct4, Nanog, sphere formation | - | - | Enhanced tumorigenicity and metastasis | [ | ||||
| Murine | Lewis lung mouse carcinoma cell line LLC | Conditioned medium for carcinoma cells (role of microenvironment) | Oct3, Oct4, Nanog, Rex1, Ras, Esg1, Cripto | Yes | - | Spheroid and tumor formation in mice, high mitotic index, angiogenesis in vivo | [ | ||
| Sarco | Osteosarcoma | Human | Cancer cell lines SAOS2, HOS, MG63 | Oct4, Nanog, Sox2, Lin28, Klf4 and c-Myc | Oct4, Nanog, Sox2, Lin28, Klf4, c-Myc, Tra-1-81, Ssea-4, Rex, alkaline phosphatase activity | - | - | - | [ |
| Liposarcoma | Human | Cancer cell line SW872 | |||||||
| Ewing’s sarcoma | Human | Cancer cell line SKNEP | |||||||
| Human | Cancer cell line CHLA-10 | Oct4, Sox2, Klf4, Nanog | Tra1-160, Ssea-3, Ssea-4, alkaline phosphatase activity | Yes | - | Various levels of undifferentiated cells, embryoid body and tumor formation in mice | [ | ||
| Breast Cancer | Human | Cancer cell line MCF-7 | Oct4, Sox2, Klf4, c-Myc | Sox2, Ssea-1, Ssea-4, Tra-1–60, Tra-1–81, alkaline phosphatase activity, sphere formation | - | Enhanced tumorigenicity, highly aggressive tumors | [ | ||
| Sox2 | Ssea-4 | - | - | Enhanced tumorigenicity | [ | ||||
| Murine | Mammary carcinoma cell line MCE12 | - | - | - | - | - | [ | ||
| Prostate cancer | Human | Prostate cancer-associated stromal cells from primary tumours | Oct4, Nanog, Sox2, Lin28 | Oct4, Nanog, Lin28, Sox2, alkaline phosphatase activity | - | - | - | [ | |
| Human | Cancer cell line PC3 | mir-302 | Oct4, Nanog, Sox2, Ssea-3, Ssea-4, sphere formation and differentiation into neuronal cells | Yes | - | - | [ | ||
| Melanoma | Murine | Cancer cell line Colo | mir-302 | Sphere formation and differentiation into neuronal cells | - | - | [ | ||
| Cancer cell line R545 | Oct4, Klf4, c-Myc | - | Yes | Yes | - | [ | |||
| Melanoma cell line B16 | - | - | - | - | - | [ | |||
Fig. 2Cancer stem cells reprogramming as an emerging tool in modelling cancer. The normal development (green arrows) denotes a passage from a pluripotent (zygote) to a “less potent state” (terminal differentiated adult tissues). During this process, adult stem cells (ASCs) in adult tissues suffer multiple tumorigenic “hits” that lead to the generation of “aberrantly reprogrammed” cancer cells, forced to be maintained in an intermediate degree of cellular differentiation (black arrow). Induced pluripotency is now being employed on cancer cell lines or patients’ tumours (named induced pluripotent cancer stem cells or iPCSCs) (blue arrows). iPCSCs cells epigenetically and transcriptionally resemble the ESC state and the cancer genome seems to be repressed in pluripotent state. In some cases the iPCSCs may exhibit early stage phenotypes corresponding to partial expression of the reprogrammed cancer genome, constituting in this way a live cell model to study cancer progression [69] (reviewed in [84]). Moreover, these iPCSCs have the ability to re-differentiate (orange arrow) back to the original or a different terminal differentiated cell lineage, losing along this process their tumorigenic and metastatic properties [110]. Alternatively, the induction to more differentiated state can occur directly from the adult tumour (in this case “trans-differentiation”-dashed blue arrow), without the need to pass first from the pluripotent state [61]. It is important to clarify the mechanisms controlling these transitions, as the ability to exogenously manipulate the stemness and differentiation of a tumour might hold promise as a therapeutic strategy in the near future
Selected clinical therapeutic agents in current cancer stem cell drug treatment
| Target | Name of drug (synonyms) | Mechanism of action | Ref.(s) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Microenviroment/Niche | Anti-CD44 monoclonal Abs | CD44 activation | [ |
| Oblimersen sodium (G3139) | Bcl2 antisense oligonucleotyde | [ | |
| AT-101 (gossypol) | Bcl2, Mcl1 inhibitor | [ | |
| ABT-263/ABT-737 | Pan Bcl2 inhibitor | [ | |
| Obatoclax (GX15-070) | [ | ||
| Sabutoclax (Bl-97C1) | [ | ||
| Anti-integrin alfa 6 monoclonal Abs | Block integrin alfa 6 binding | [ | |
| GLPG0187 | Integrin alfa peptide antagonist | [ | |
| EMD 121974 (Cilengitide) | Integrin alfa beta peptide antagonist | [ | |
| Volociximab | Monoclonal antibody targeting integrin alfa beta | [ | |
| ATN-161 | Integrin alfa beta peptide antagonist | [ | |
| Pepducins | CXCR4 antagonist | [ | |
| Plerixafor (AMD3100) | [ | ||
| Neutralizing ab | CXCR4 blocker | [ | |
| Bevacizumab (Avastin) | VEGF-A/VEGFR blocker | [ | |
| Cediranib/AZD2171 | Tyrosine kinase inhibitor VEGFR2 | [ | |
| EphA3 monoclonal Abs | EphA3 blockers | Clinical trial phase I by KloBios Pharmaceuticals | |
| Systemic infusion of enzyme PEGPH20 | HA inhibitor | [ | |
| Anthracyclines, EGFR inhibitors, cardiac glycosides, histone deacetylases, HSP90 inhibitors, microtubule targeting agents, proteasome inhibitors, topoisomerase I inhibitors | HIF-1 inhibitors | Reviewed in [ | |
| DNA vaccines | Legumain, Fra-1, Stat3, FAP, HER-2 (CAFs-TAMs) | Reviewed in [ | |
| Monoclonal Ab Sibrotozumab | FAP | Clinical trial phase I [ | |
| PAI-1 | uPA/uPAR inhibitors | Reviewed in [ | |
| Radioactive labeled Ab, siRNA | Tenascin-C | Reviewed in [ | |
| Monoclonal Ab 81C6 | Clinical trial phase II [ | ||
| NK4, anti-HGF mAbs | HGF/Met | [ | |
| 5-Aza-2΄-deoxycytidine | DNMT1 | [ | |
| MMPs inhibitors | MMPs | [ | |
| Wnt/βcatenin pathway | Anti-Frizzled (Fzd7) monoclonal antibodies (OMP-18R5) | Block formation of active receptor signalling complex; binds 5 Fizzled receptors | Clinical trial phase I by OncoMed; [ |
| Truncated Fizzled 8-Fc fusion protein (OMP-54 F28) | Fzd8-Fc selectively binds Wnt ligands | Clinical trial phase I by OncoMed in collaboration with Bayer Pharma AG | |
| NSAIDs | COX mechanisms | [ | |
| IWP2 | o-acetyltransferase inhibitor | [ | |
| XAV939 | Tankyrase inhibitor | [ | |
| PKF115-584 | TCF/βcatenin inhibitor | [ | |
| CGP049090 | |||
| IWR | Axin stabilizer | [ | |
| ICG-001 | CREB/βcatenin interaction inhibitor | [ | |
| Hedgehog pathway | GANT-61 | Gli DNA binding inhibitor | [ |
| Arsenic trioxide | [ | ||
| BMS-833923 (XL139) | SMO inhibitor | [ | |
| LDE-225 | |||
| LEQ506 | |||
| PF-04449913 | |||
| TAK-441 | |||
| Cyclopamine and based compounds | [ | ||
| Vismodegib (GDC-0049) | [ | ||
| mTOR/PI3K/Akt | Perifosine (krx-0401, d-21266) | Akt inhibitor | [ |
| MK-2206 | [ | ||
| GSK690693 | [ | ||
| GSK2141795 | [ | ||
| LY2780301 | [ | ||
| Rapamycin | mTORC1 inhibitor | [ | |
| Temisirolimus (CCl-779) | [ | ||
| Everolimus (SDZ RAD) | [ | ||
| Ridaforolimus (AP23573, MK-8669) | [ | ||
| OSI-027 | mTORC1/2 inhibitor | [ | |
| PP242 | [ | ||
| PP30 | |||
| WAY-600 | [ | ||
| WYE-687 | |||
| WYE-354 | |||
| AZD8055 | [ | ||
| INK128 | [ | ||
| NVP-BKM120 | PI3K inhibitor | [ | |
| PX-866 | [ | ||
| GDC-0941 | [ | ||
| CAL-101 (GS-1101) | [ | ||
| SF1126 | PI3K & mTOR inhibitor | [ | |
| NVP-BEZ235 | [ | ||
| XL765 | [ | ||
| GDC-0980 | [ | ||
| PI-103 | [ | ||
| Metformin | Inhibition of mTOR activation through AMPK | [ | |
| Notch pathway | Anti-Notch 2 and 3 monoclonal Abs (OMP-595R) | Block cleavage of Notch receptor | Clinical trial phase I by OncoMed |
| Anti-Notch 1 and 2 monoclonal Abs | [ | ||
| Anti-Notch 3 monoclonal Abs | [ | ||
| Anti-DLL4 (demcizumab) | Block binding of DLLL4 to Notch receptor | Clinical trial phase I by OncoMed | |
| Anti-DLL4 monoclonal Abs (OMP-21 M18, REGN421) | [ | ||
| DAPT | Gamma-secretase inhibitor | [ | |
| MRK-003 | [ | ||
| LY450139 | [ | ||
| Telomerase | Imetelstat/GRN-163 L | Telomerase inhibitor | Clinical trial phase II by Geron Corporation; [ |
| GRN-163 | Antagonist of telomerase template | [ | |
| Drug efflux | PSC-833 | ABCB1 inhibitor | [ |
| YHO-13351 | ABCG2 inhibitor | [ | |
| Redox balance and metabolism | Genipin | Suppression of UPC2 | [ |
| Phytochemicals | Redox system | [ | |
| Indo-3-carbinol (I3C) | Redox system (stimulates BRCA1) | ||
| Genistein | Redox system (ROS scavenger, inhibitor of NFkB, Akt, PTK) | [ | |
| CSC immunogenic responses | CD133 peptide, ICT-121 | Dendritic cell-based vaccine | Clinical trial phase I by ImmunoCellular Therapeutics |
| Peptide vaccine (SL401 and SL701) | Interleukin-3 receptor | Clinical trial phase I and II completed by Stemline Therapeutics | |
| VS6063 | Focal adhesion kinase (inhibitor) | Clinical trial phase I completed by Verastem and Pfeizer | |
| Ipilimumab | CTLA-4 blockers | Clinical trial phase III by BMS/Medarex; [ | |
| TGN1412 | CD28 agonist | Clinical trial phase I [ | |
| MDX-1106 | PD-1 antagonist | Clinical trial phase I [ | |
| Celebrex, Rofecoxib | COX2 inhibitors | Reviewed in [ | |
| CXCR1 blocking Abs or small molecule repertaxin | IL-8/CXCR1 inhibitor | [ | |
| TGF-β type II receptor antibody or SMAD4 siRNA | TGF-β/SMAD 4 | [ | |
| Stemness | BBI608 | STAT3 inhibitor | Clinical trial phase III [ |
| BBI503 | Nanog inhibitor | ||
| miRNA based therapies | let-7 anti-sense oligos | H-RAS and HMGA2 | [ |
| miR200c | Bmi-1, ZEB1 | [ | |
| miR-34a | CD44 activation | [ |