| Literature DB >> 30405720 |
Petra Gener1,2, Joaquin Seras-Franzoso1, Patricia González Callejo1,2, Fernanda Andrade1,3,4, Diana Rafael1,2, Francesc Martínez1, Sara Montero1,2, Diego Arango5, Joan Sayós6, Ibane Abasolo1,2,7, Simó Schwartz1,2.
Abstract
There are remarkable similarities in the description of cancer stem cells (CSCs) and cancer cells with mesenchymal phenotype. Both cell types are highly tumorigenic, resistant against common anticancer treatment, and thought to cause metastatic growth. Moreover, cancer cells are able to switch between CSC and non-CSC phenotypes and vice versa, to ensure the necessary balance within the tumor. Likewise, cancer cells can switch between epithelial and mesenchymal phenotypes via well-described transition (EMT/MET) that is thought to be crucial for tumor propagation. In this review, we discuss whether, and to which extend, the CSCs and mesenchymal cancer cells are overlapping phenomena in terms of mechanisms, origin, and implication for cancer treatment. As well, we describe the dynamism of both phenotypes and involvement of the tumor microenvironment in CSC reversion and in EMT.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30405720 PMCID: PMC6199882 DOI: 10.1155/2018/4516454
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stem Cells Int Impact factor: 5.443
Figure 1Cancer stem cells versus mesenchymal cancer cells. There are remarkable similarities in the properties of CSCs and cancer cells with mesenchymal phenotype, which oppose from characteristics of non-CSCs and epithelial cancer cells, respectively. Both are highly invasive, tumorigenic, resistant against common anticancer treatment, and thought to cause metastatic growth. Both cell types share several cell markers. Besides, both phenotypes are reversible and can be interchanged via EMT or CSC phenotype interconversion.
Figure 2E/M hybrid phenotype. E/M hybrid phenotype of tumor cells represents an ideal window for stemness reversion. In this state, cancer cells coexpress epithelial and mesenchymal genes and promote expression of stemness genes. This results in formation of a tumor sphere in vitro and metastatic spread in vivo. Also, a majority of circulating cancer cell (CTC) clusters coexpress epithelial and mesenchymal markers together with stem cell markers. An inhibition of EMT and/or stemness phenotype should lead to hindrance of advanced cancer.
Figure 3Tumor microenvironment and cancer cell phenotype. Schematic representation of TME influence on stemness and mesenchymal properties of cancer cells. The dynamic phenotype of cancer cells (stemness, EMT) is regulated by several signaling pathways. TGF-β and NF-κB signaling pathways are activated by different microenvironmental factors like MSCs, CAFs, TAMs, MDSCs, or hypoxia. Exosomes derived from respective cell types play an important role in intercellular paracrine communication.
Different cancer therapeutic approaches based on CSCs and/or EMT.
| CSC | EMT | Therapeutic target | Therapeutic approach | Cancer type | Development stage | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| x | AKT/mTOR signaling pathway | Tunicamycin | Colon cancer | Preclinical ( | [ | |
| x | x | AKT2 | siRNA | Breast cancer | Preclinical ( | [ |
| x | ALOX5 | Zileuton | Leukemia | Clinical (phase 1) |
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| x | Bmi-1 | Nigericin | Nasopharyngeal carcinoma | Preclinical ( | [ | |
| x | Bmi-1 | shRNA | Nasopharyngeal carcinoma | Preclinical ( | [ | |
| x | EGR-1 | shRNA against EGR-1 | Breast cancer | Preclinical ( | [ | |
| x | EGR-1 | Oxytocin | HNSCC | Preclinical ( | [ | |
| x | EGR-1 | Syntactic catalytic DNA | Breast cancer | Preclinical ( | [ | |
| x | EGR-1 | 2′-Benzoyloxycinnamaldehyde | Colon cancer | Preclinical ( | [ | |
| x | EGR-1 | siRNA | Colon cancer | Preclinical ( | [ | |
| x | Hedgehog signaling | Cyclopamine | Glioblastoma | Preclinical ( | [ | |
| x | HMGA2 | LBH589 | Prostate cancer | Preclinical ( | [ | |
| x | IAP family | AT-406, SM-164, and TRAIL | Nasopharyngeal carcinoma | Preclinical ( | [ | |
| x | x | JAK 1/2 | Ruxolitinib | Pancreatic cancer | Preclinical ( | [ |
| x | Krüppel-like factor 5 | Metformin | TNBC | Preclinical ( | [ | |
| x | Lysine-specific demethylase 1 | Pargyline | Prostate cancer | Preclinical ( | [ | |
| x | mTOR | Rapamycin | Neuroblastoma | Preclinical ( | [ | |
| x | n.d. | Metformin | Gastric cancer | Preclinical ( | [ | |
| x | n.d. | Salinomycin | HNSCC | Preclinical ( | [ | |
| x | n.d. | Salinomycin analogs | Breast cancer | Preclinical ( | [ | |
| x | n.d. | EpCAM/CD3 antibody | Pancreatic cancer | Preclinical ( | [ | |
| n.d. | Anti-CD33 antibody | Glioblastoma | Preclinical ( | [ | ||
| x | x | n.d. | Quercetin | Pancreatic cancer | Preclinical ( | [ |
| x | n.d. | All- | Gastric cancer | Preclinical ( | [ | |
| x | n.d. | Mithramycin | Various neoplasms | Clinical (phase 2) |
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| x | n.d. | Drug combination | Glioblastoma | Clinical (phase 1) |
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| x | n.d. | Epirubicin + cisplatin + capecitabine | Gastric cancer | Clinical (phase 3) |
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| |
| x | NADH dehydrogenase | DECA-14 | Neuroblastoma | Preclinical ( | [ | |
| x | x | Nestin | shRNA | Glioblastoma | Preclinical ( | [ |
| x | x | Nestin | siRNA | Pancreatic cancer | Preclinical ( | [ |
| x | x | p53 mutant cells | Metformin | Ovarian cancer FTPPC, pancreatic cancer | Clinical (phase 2) |
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| x | x | PI3K-AKT; ERK1/2 pathways | LY294002; U0126 | Breast cancer | Preclinical ( | [ |
| x | SNAIL | Trichostatin A | Lung cancer | Preclinical ( | [ | |
| x | Snail-p53 interaction | GN-25; GN-29 | Pancreatic cancer | Preclinical ( | [ | |
| x | STAT3 | LLL12; shRNA | Breast cancer | Preclinical ( | [ | |
| x | STAT3 | BBI608 | Various cancers | Preclinical ( | [ | |
| x | x | STAT3 | Salinomycin | Breast cancer | Preclinical ( | [ |
| x | x | STAT3 pathway | Oncostatin M | Hepatocellular carcinoma | Preclinical ( | [ |
| x | WNT pathway | Nigericin | Lung cancer | Preclinical ( | [ | |
| x | x | ZEB1 | shRNA | Pancreatic cancer | Preclinical ( | [ |
n.d.: not described. ∗ClinicalTrials.gov identifier. Abbreviations: HNSCC: head and neck squamous cell carcinoma; FTPPC: fallopian tube, primary peritoneal cancer.