| Literature DB >> 34064635 |
Wookyeom Yang1, Dasol Kim2, Dae Kyoung Kim2, Kyung Un Choi3, Dong Soo Suh4, Jae Ho Kim2.
Abstract
Ovarian cancer is a fatal gynecological malignancy. Although first-line chemotherapy and surgical operation are effective treatments for ovarian cancer, its clinical management remains a challenge owing to intrinsic or acquired drug resistance and relapse at local or distal lesions. Cancer stem cells (CSCs) are a small subpopulation of cells inside tumor tissues, and they can self-renew and differentiate. CSCs are responsible for the cancer malignancy involved in relapses as well as resistance to chemotherapy and radiation. These malignant properties of CSCs are regulated by cell surface receptors and intracellular pluripotency-associated factors triggered by internal or external stimuli from the tumor microenvironment. The malignancy of CSCs can be attenuated by individual or combined restraining of cell surface receptors and intracellular pluripotency-associated factors. Therefore, targeted therapy against CSCs is a feasible therapeutic tool against ovarian cancer. In this paper, we review the prominent roles of cell surface receptors and intracellular pluripotency-associated factors in mediating the stemness and malignancy of ovarian CSCs.Entities:
Keywords: cancer stem cells; chemoreistance; ovarian cancer; stemess
Year: 2021 PMID: 34064635 PMCID: PMC8151268 DOI: 10.3390/ijms22105059
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Origin and initiation of high-grade serous ovarian cancer. High-grade serous ovarian cancer originates from the fallopian tube (A) and surface epithelia (B). Both normal epithelia (blue cells) have a small subpopulation of stem-like cells (Pink cells), which express ALDH, CD117, CD133, CD24, and CD44. They exhibit stem cell properties, such as self-renewal and multi-differentiation potential. (A) The stem-like cells in the fallopian tube epithelium acquire p53 mutations owing to uncertain reasons. Then, they expand into serous tubal intraepithelial carcinomas (STICs), transform into fallopian tube cancer, and migrate to seed the ovarian epithelium or distant metastasis. (B) In the case of origin from the ovary surface, most researchers believe that the repetitive damages on the ovary surface during ovulation and repair cause accumulated mutations and p53 mutations in the stem-like cells of the ovarian surface epithelium.
The ovarian cancer stem cell markers and their features.
| Protein Names | Features | References |
|---|---|---|
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| CD44 | CD44 is the most common CSC marker in the ovary, breast, and pancreas. CD44+ cells have been found in primary, metastatic, and malignant ascites of ovarian carcinoma. | [ |
| CD117 | CD117 has been known as c-kit. CD117 is a receptor tyrosine kinase related to survival, proliferation, migration, tumor progression, and stemness. CD117 is expressed in hematopoietic, mesenchymal, embryonic stem cells. CD117 is involved in stemness and chemoresistance in ovarian cancer. | [ |
| CD24 | CD24 has been verified as a critical CSC marker in several cancers involving ovarian and colorectal cancers. CD24 is known as the regulation of proliferation, self-renewal, and chemoresistance in ovarian cancer. CD24 positive expressed ovarian cancer patients is poor survival. | [ |
| CD133 | CD133 is a glycosylated transmembrane protein and associated with maintaining cancer stemness and tumor metastasis. CD133 has been identified as a prognostic marker in several cancers such as ovarian, glioblastoma, and prostate cancer. CD133 also is correlated with chemoresistance and poor prognosis in ovarian cancer. | [ |
| CD166/ALCAM | CD166 is a transmembrane glycoprotein of the immunoglobulin superfamily. CD166 is overexpressed and is associated with a poor prognosis in various cancers. CD166 induced intracellular cancer stem markers such as OCT4, SOX2, and ALDH1A1. CD166 also is associated with maintaining CSC properties and chemoresistance. | [ |
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| ALDH1 | ALDH1 is an enzyme to detoxify reactive aldehydes. ALDH composes three classes. ALDH1 consists of three isozymes; ALDH1A1 is predominantly a CSC marker. ALDH elevated stem-cell marker expression, self-renewal, proliferation, and differentiation potential. ALDH is also associated with invasion, drug resistance, and worse progression-free survival in ovarian cancer. | [ |
| Autotaxin | Autotaxin possesses lysophospholipase D activity and produces lysophosphatidic acid (LPA). Autotaxin is expressed in several tissues, including body fluid, and it is highly expressed in the breast, glioblastoma, prostate, hepatocellular carcinoma, and melanoma. Autotaxin enhances migration, sphere formation, and cancer stemness markers. | [ |
| Pluripotency-associated factors | OCT4, SOX2, and NANOG are the most common intracellular cancer stem markers in normal and cancer stem cells. Among these factors, SOX2 plays a more substantial role in early tumor initiation and tumor relapse in ovarian cancer, including breast, gastric, and lung. The knock-down SOX2 inhibits ovarian CSC survival and spheroid formation. | [ |
| HIF-1α | Hif1a is one of the hypoxia-inducible factors and master regulators of hypoxia. Hif1a is correlated with growth, survival, and metastasis during hypoxia conditions. Hif1a can elevate the expression of pluripotent stem markers and plays an essential role in maintaining CSC properties. | [ |
Figure 2Microenvironment between cancer stem cells and cancer-associated cells in tumor tissue. Cancer stem cells have several surface markers that can be isolated and targeted, such as CD44, CD117, CD24, CD133, and CD166. Cancer stem cells overexpress pluripotent proteins, including ALDH1, ATX, HIF-1α, OCT4, SOX2, and NANOG, which regulate cancer stem cell properties by mediating the expression of surface markers, cytokines, and growth factors. ATX produces LPA, which induces cancer-associated cells to differentiate into myofibroblasts via the TGF-b1–Samd2/3 axis. LPAR1 activation by LPA triggers cell proliferation and migration (homing) toward cancer tissues. Cancer-associated cells secrete PDGF to activate PDGFR in cancer stem cells, thereby maintaining cancer stem cell properties.