| Literature DB >> 27871274 |
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Cytotoxic chemotherapy brings routine cures to only a small select group of metastatic malignancies comprising gestational trophoblast tumours, germ cell tumours, acute leukemia, Hodgkin's disease, high grade lymphomas and some of the rare childhood malignancies. We have previously postulated that the extreme sensitivity to chemotherapy for these malignancies is linked to the on-going high levels of apoptotic sensitivity that is naturally linked with the unique genetic events of nuclear fusion, meiosis, VDJ recombination, somatic hypermutation, and gastrulation that have occurred within the cells of origin of these malignancies. In this review we will examine the cancer stem cell/cancer cell relationship of each of the chemotherapy curable malignancies and how this relationship impacts on the resultant biology and pro-apoptotic sensitivity of the varying cancer cell types. DISCUSSION: In contrast to the common epithelial cancers, in each of the chemotherapy curable malignancies there are no conventional hierarchical cancer stem cells. However cells with cancer stem like qualities can arise stochastically from within the general tumour cell population. These stochastic stem cells acquire a degree of resistance to DNA damaging agents but also retain much of the key characteristics of the cancer cells from which they develop. We would argue that the balance between the acquired resistance of the stochastic cancer stem cell and the inherent chemotherapy sensitivity of parent tumour cell determines the overall chemotherapy curability of each diagnosis. The cancer stem cells in the chemotherapy curable malignancies appear to have two key biological differences from those of the more common chemotherapy incurable malignancies. The first difference is that the conventional hierarchical pattern of cancer stem cells is absent in each of the chemotherapy curable malignancies. The other key difference, we suggest, is that the stochastic stem cells in the chemotherapy curable malignancies take on a significant aspect of the biological characteristics of their parent cancer cells. This action includes for the chemotherapy curable malignancies the heightened pro-apoptotic sensitivity linked to their respective associated unique genetic events. For the chemotherapy curable malignancies the combination of the relationship of their cancer stem cells combined with the extreme inherent sensitivity to induction of apoptosis from DNA damaging agents plays a key role in determining their overall curability with chemotherapy.Entities:
Keywords: Apoptosis; Cancer stem cells; Chemotherapy; Hierarchy; Resistance; Stochastic
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27871274 PMCID: PMC5117562 DOI: 10.1186/s12885-016-2956-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Cancer ISSN: 1471-2407 Impact factor: 4.430
Cancer stem cell structure, associated unique genetic events and chemotherapy curability
| Metastatic malignancy | Cancer stem cell model | Associated unique genetic event | Chemotherapy curability |
|---|---|---|---|
| Common epithelial cancers | Hierarchical | None | - |
| Gestational trophoblast tumours | Non-hierarchical | Nuclear fusion | +++ |
| Germ cell tumours | Non-hierarchical | Meiosis | +++ |
| Childhood malignancies | Non-hierarchical | Gastrulation | + |
| B and T cell malignancies | |||
| Acute undifferentiated leukemia | Hierarchical | None | - |
| Acute lymphocytic leukemia | Non-hierarchical | VDJ | +++ |
| ALK + ve T Cell lymphoma | Non-hierarchical | VDJ | ++ |
| Mantle cell lymphoma | Non-hierarchical | None | - |
| Diffuse large B Cell lymphoma | Non-hierarchical | SHM | ++ |
| Burkitt’s lymphoma | Non-hierarchical | SHM | ++ |
| Hodgkin lymphoma | Non-hierarchical | SHM | ++ |
| CLL | Non-hierarchical | None | - |
| Myeloma | Non-hierarchical | None | - |
| Mature T cell malignancies | Non-hierarchical | None | - |
The relationship of the cancer stem cell model, of being either hierarchical as in the common epithelial cancers or non-hierarchical without somatic stem derived cancer stem cells, the associated unique genetic events and the associated degree of chemotherapy curability are shown. For simplicity chemotherapy curability is shown on a zero to 3 star range
Fig. 1The Hierarchical Cancer Stem Model. In this simplified model, the standard somatic stem cells, give rise to healthy cells and also maintain their stem cell pool. In the epithelial cancers the somatic stem cells can give rise to the hierarchical cancer stem cells that retains much of the properties of the somatic stem cell, but gives rise to cancer cells. In some malignancies, cells with stem-like qualities can arise from within the tumour cell pool in a stochastic model
Fig. 2The Properties of Stochastic Stem Cells in B Cell Malignancies. In B cell malignancies the main cancer mutational events occur during VDJ recombination and somatic hypermutation. The resultant malignant cells that arise during B cell development remain fixed at that point in development and neither progress to be terminally differentiated plasma cell or undergo apoptotic death as B cells that fail developmental checks normally do. Dependant on the timing of the onset of the malignant phenotype the B cell takes on the phenotype of the cell of origin. Each of the malignant cell types are developmentally isolated from the HSC but can develop stochastic cells with stem like qualities, including a degree of resistance to chemotherapy. We suggest that there is a balance of this stem like acquired chemotherapy resistance against the apoptotic sensitivity linked to the upregulated activity in B cell development related to VDJ and SHM activity. This balance determines if the differing stochastic stem cells will survive chemotherapy and hence if the B cell malignancy can have the potential to be cured with chemotherapy or not