| Literature DB >> 31464654 |
Lanqi Gong1,2, Qian Yan1,2, Yu Zhang1,2, Xiaona Fang1,2, Beilei Liu1,2, Xinyuan Guan3,4.
Abstract
In the past decade, remarkable progress has been made in reprogramming terminally differentiated somatic cells and cancer cells into induced pluripotent cells and cancer cells with benign phenotypes. Recent studies have explored various approaches to induce reprogramming from one cell type to another, including lineage-specific transcription factors-, combinatorial small molecules-, microRNAs- and embryonic microenvironment-derived exosome-mediated reprogramming. These reprogramming approaches have been proven to be technically feasible and versatile to enable re-activation of sequestered epigenetic regions, thus driving fate decisions of differentiated cells. One of the significant utilities of cancer cell reprogramming is the therapeutic potential of retrieving normal cell functions from various malignancies. However, there are several major obstacles to overcome in cancer cell reprogramming before clinical translation, including characterization of reprogramming mechanisms, improvement of reprogramming efficiency and safety, and development of delivery methods. Recently, several insights in reprogramming mechanism have been proposed, and determining progress has been achieved to promote reprogramming efficiency and feasibility, allowing it to emerge as a promising therapy against cancer in the near future. This review aims to discuss recent applications in cancer cell reprogramming, with a focus on the clinical significance and limitations of different reprogramming approaches, while summarizing vital roles played by transcription factors, small molecules, microRNAs and exosomes during the reprogramming process.Entities:
Keywords: Benign; Cancer cell reprogramming; Cancer stem cell; Exosome; Induced pluripotent stem cell; Malignancy; MicroRNA; Pluripotency; Small molecule; Transcription factor
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31464654 PMCID: PMC6716904 DOI: 10.1186/s40880-019-0393-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Commun (Lond) ISSN: 2523-3548
Fig. 1Emerging therapeutic strategies against primary cancer. Researchers and clinicians have explored three mainstay strategies for cancer treatment: regulating the immune responses to cancer cells; reprogramming cancer cells into benign cells; directly eradicating cancer stem cells. Immunotherapy and targeted therapy have better therapeutic performance comparing to conventional chemo-/radio-therapy, but their effects are still suffering from the existence of cancer stem cells and heterogeneity. Cancer cell reprogramming therapy elicits a potential to convert cancer cells into benign cells regardless of cell subtypes. Although cancer cell reprogramming therapy has not entered clinical trials to date, progress still continues
Fig. 2Epigenetic landscape of cell reprogramming and development. Cells undergo extensive epigenetic modifications from pluripotency to a terminally differentiated state. Cell fates have been identified as flexible and reversible, suggesting that terminally differentiated cells, such as cancer cells, are feasible to be reprogrammed back into a pluripotent stage via re-activation of epigenetic barriers. The induced pluripotent stem cells can further differentiate into benign cells with distinct lineages. Unlike indirect cancer cell reprogramming, direct cancer cell reprogramming allows cells to bypass the pluripotent stage so that they can be directly converted into other types of cells by transcription factors, small molecules, microRNAs or exosome
Summary of various reprogramming approaches converting cancer malignancy to benignity
| Cancer type | Cell line | Reprogramming approach | Delivery method | Cell fate | Efficiency | Effects | Publication year | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Melanoma | R545 | In vitro introduction of KLF4, Oct-3/4, c-Myc | Retrovirus | Pluripotent cancer cells | 0.05%–0.1% | Demethylation of the Oct-4 and NANOG promoter regions and loss of in vivo tumorigenicity in chimeras | 2009 | Utikal et al. [ |
| Pancreatic cancer | MIAPaCa-2 | In vitro introduction of KLF4, Oct-3/4, SOX2, c-Myc | Retrovirus and lentivirus | Pluripotent cancer cells | Not determined | Stable differentiation into varied lineages and loss of in vivo tumorigenicity in NOD/SCID mice | 2010 | Miyoshi et al. [ |
| Hepatocellular carcinoma | PLC | |||||||
| Colorectal carcinoma | DLD-1, HCT116 | |||||||
| B cell lymphoma and leukemia | RCH-ACV, CEMO-1, Val, MUTZ5, NALM-20 | In vitro introduction of C/EBPα | Retrovirus and lentivirus | Macrophage-like cells | 80% partially or entirely reprogrammed | Up-regulation of macrophage-associated markers and loss of in vivo tumorigenicity in immunodeficient mice | 2013 | Rapino et al. [ |
| Hepatocellular carcinoma | HCCLM3 and Huh7 | In vitro introduction of HNF1A, HNF4A, and FOXA3 | Adenovirus | Hepatocyte-like cells | 100% infection efficiency, reprogramming efficiency not determined | Recover of hepatocyte functions and capability of in vivo liver regeneration | 2018 | Cheng et al. [ |
| BCR-ABL1 + precursor B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia | Human B-ALL clinical samples | In vitro delivery of FLT3L, IL-7, IL-3, GM-CSF, MCSF | Culture medium | Macrophage-like cells | 53% initially reprogrammed; After sorting, > 98% yield | Recover of phagocytic ability and loss of in vivo tumorigenicity | 2015 | McClellan et al. [ |
| In vitro | Nucleofection | |||||||
| Breast cancer | Py2T | In vitro delivery of TGF- β or Trametinib, in vivo EMT induction using Cre mice | Culture medium, animal model | Adipocytes | 60% reprogrammed | Recover of in vitro adipocyte functions and loss of in vivo metastatic potential | 2019 | Ishay-Ronen et al. [ |
| Skin cancer | Colo and PC3 | in vitro introduction of MicroRNA-302s | Retrovirus | Pluripotent embryonic stem-like cells | 100% transfection efficiency, 2%–5% reprogramming efficiency | Stable differentiation into varied lineages and loss of in vivo tumorigenicity | 2008 | Lin et al. [ |
| Breast cancer | MCF-7 and MDA-MB-231 | in vitro delivery human embryonic stem cells-derived exosomes | Culture medium | Pluripotent embryonic stem-like cells | 90% of breast cancer cells lost Vimentin expression | Recover of benign differentiation pathways and reduction of in vivo tumor-forming potential | 2017 | Zhou et al. [ |
| Colorectal carcinoma | Colo-320 and HT-29 |