| Literature DB >> 31430054 |
Nadège Bidan1,2, Justine Bailleul-Dubois1,2,3, Jérémy Duval2, Marie Winter1,2, Marie Denoulet1,2, Karine Hannebicque2,4, Ihsan Y El-Sayed1, Christophe Ginestier5, Violaine Forissier5, Emmanuelle Charafe-Jauffret5, Manon Macario5, Yukiko T Matsunaga6,7,8, Samuel Meignan2,3,4, François Anquez9, Sylvain Julien1,2, Amélie Bonnefond10, Mehdi Derhourhi10, Xuefen Le Bourhis1,2, Chann Lagadec1,2,3.
Abstract
Many solid cancers are hierarchically organized with a small number of cancer stem cells (CSCs) able to regrow a tumor, while their progeny lacks this feature. Breast CSC is known to contribute to therapy resistance. The study of those cells is usually based on their cell-surface markers like CD44high /CD24low/neg or their aldehyde dehydrogenase (ALDH) activity. However, these markers cannot be used to track the dynamics of CSC. Here, a transcriptomic analysis is performed to identify segregating gene expression in CSCs and non-CSCs, sorted by Aldefluor assay. It is observed that among ALDH-associated genes, only ALDH1A1 isoform is increased in CSCs. A CSC reporter system is then developed by using a far red-fluorescent protein (mNeptune) under the control of ALDH1A1 promoter. mNeptune-positive cells exhibit higher sphere-forming capacity, tumor formation, and increased resistance to anticancer therapies. These results indicate that the reporter identifies cells with stemness characteristics. Moreover, live tracking of cells in a microfluidic system reveals a higher extravasation potential of CSCs. Live tracking of non-CSCs under irradiation treatment show, for the first time, live reprogramming of non-CSCs into CSCs. Therefore, the reporter will allow for cell tracking to better understand the implication of CSCs in breast cancer development and recurrence.Entities:
Keywords: ALDH1A1; breast cancer; cancer stem cells; fluorescent reporter systems
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31430054 DOI: 10.1002/pmic.201800454
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proteomics ISSN: 1615-9853 Impact factor: 3.984