| Literature DB >> 28038467 |
Xiewan Chen1,2, Rongxia Liao1, Dezhi Li2, Jianguo Sun2.
Abstract
Local and distant recurrence of malignant tumors following radio- and/or chemotherapy correlates with poor prognosis of patients. Among the reasons for cancer recurrence, preexisting cancer stem cells (CSCs) are considered the most likely cause due to their properties of self-renewal, pluripotency, plasticity and tumorigenicity. It has been demonstrated that preexisting cancer stem cells derive from normal stem cells and differentiated somatic cells that undergo transformation and dedifferentiation respectively under certain conditions. However, recent studies have revealed that cancer stem cells can also be induced from non-stem cancer cells by radiochemotherapy, constituting the subpopulation of induced cancer stem cells (iCSCs). These findings suggest that radiochemotherapy has the side effect of directly transforming non-stem cancer cells into induced cancer stem cells, possibly contributing to tumor recurrence and metastasis. Therefore, drugs targeting cancer stem cells or preventing dedifferentiation of non-stem cancer cells can be combined with radiochemotherapy to improve its antitumor efficacy. The current review is to investigate the mechanisms by which induced cancer stem cells are generated by radiochemotherapy and hence provide new strategies for cancer treatment.Entities:
Keywords: dedifferentiation; induced cancer stem cells; plasticity; reprogramming; therapeutic resistance
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28038467 PMCID: PMC5370042 DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.14230
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncotarget ISSN: 1949-2553
Figure 1Origins of CSCs and iCSCs
First, stem cells in normal tissues are forced to alter their differentiation pattern and become CSCs after long exposure to DNA-damaging agents that allows for cumulative mutations. Second, differentiated somatic cells can dedifferentiate to gain CSC properties with fetal phenotypes under the influence of external factors, such as Oct-4. Third, non-stem cancer cells can dedifferentiate into iCSCs under the influence of external factors and irradiation or chemotherapy. CSCs and iCSCs possess the capabilities of self-renewal, pluripotency and plasticity, and thus are considered the major cause of tumorigenesis and tumor recurrence.
Figure 2Mechanisms underlying the generation of iCSCs by radiochemotherapy and their implications for new therapeutic strategies
Exposed to radiochemotherapy, preexisting CSCs in tumor tissues could survive and be enriched, and non-stem cancer cells could dedifferentiate into iCSCs via abnormally activated or upregulated signaling pathways (Notch, Wnt, HH, etc.). In this case, both preexisting CSCs and iCSCs exhibit increased mammosphere-forming ability, tumorigenicity and ability to cause cancer recurrence (left). Therefore, radiochemotherapy combined with pathways-inhibiting drugs could eradicate preexisting CSCs and prevent dedifferentiation of non-stem cancer cells into iCSCs. As a result, tumor tissue would dramatically shrink (right).
Mechanisms underlying the generation of iCSCs by radiochemotherapy
| Type of cancer | Anticancer treatment | Signaling pathway | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|
| Breast cancer | Ionizing radiation | Notch | [ |
| Lung adenocarcinoma | Chemotherapy | miR-29ab, miR-183, | [ |
| Osteoblast | Ionizing radiation | Notch1-4 | [ |
| Stomach cancer | Chemotherapy | Notch, Wnt | [ |
| Glioblastoma multiforme | Ionizing radiation | Wnt | [ |
| Glioblastoma multiforme | Chemotherapy | Hedgehog | [ |
| Breast cancer | Chemotherapy | miR-200c | [ |
| Breast cancer | Chemotherapy | miR-125b, Wnt | [ |
| Breast cancer | Ionizing radiation | miR-200c | [ |
| Breast cancer | Chemotherapy | miR-29 | [ |
| Transformed tumors | Chemotherapy | Microenvironment | [ |