| Literature DB >> 31595974 |
Katja Kaipio1, Ping Chen2, Pia Roering1, Kaisa Huhtinen1, Piia Mikkonen3, Päivi Östling4,5, Laura Lehtinen1, Naziha Mansuri1, Taina Korpela1, Swapnil Potdar6, Johanna Hynninen7, Annika Auranen8, Seija Grénman7, Krister Wennerberg6,9, Sampsa Hautaniemi10, Olli Carpén1,10.
Abstract
Poor chemotherapy response remains a major treatment challenge for high-grade serous ovarian cancer (HGSC). Cancer stem cells are the major contributors to relapse and treatment failure as they can survive conventional therapy. Our objectives were to characterise stemness features in primary patient-derived cell lines, correlate stemness markers with clinical outcome and test the response of our cells to both conventional and exploratory drugs. Tissue and ascites samples, treatment-naive and/or after neoadjuvant chemotherapy, were prospectively collected. Primary cancer cells, cultured under conditions favouring either adherent or spheroid growth, were tested for stemness markers; the same markers were analysed in tissue and correlated with chemotherapy response and survival. Drug sensitivity and resistance testing was performed with 306 oncology compounds. Spheroid growth condition HGSC cells showed increased stemness marker expression (including aldehyde dehydrogenase isoform I; ALDH1A1) as compared with adherent growth condition cells, and increased resistance to platinum and taxane. A set of eight stemness markers separated treatment-naive tumours into two clusters and identified a distinct subgroup of HGSC with enriched stemness features. Expression of ALDH1A1, but not most other stemness markers, was increased after neoadjuvant chemotherapy and its expression in treatment-naive tumours correlated with chemoresistance and reduced survival. In drug sensitivity and resistance testing, five compounds, including two PI3K-mTOR inhibitors, demonstrated significant activity in both cell culture conditions. Thirteen compounds, including EGFR, PI3K-mTOR and aurora kinase inhibitors, were more toxic to spheroid cells than adherent cells. Our results identify stemness markers in HGSC that are associated with a decreased response to conventional chemotherapy and reduced survival if expressed by treatment-naive tumours. EGFR, mTOR-PI3K and aurora kinase inhibitors are candidates for targeting this cell population.Entities:
Keywords: drug sensitivity; ovarian cancer; patient-derived cell line; stem-like cell; survival
Year: 2019 PMID: 31595974 DOI: 10.1002/path.5356
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Pathol ISSN: 0022-3417 Impact factor: 7.996