| Literature DB >> 35562993 |
Silvia Mara Baez Rodriguez1, Georgiana-Adeline Staicu2, Ani-Simona Sevastre3, Carina Baloi2, Vasile Ciubotaru1, Anica Dricu2, Ligia Gabriela Tataranu1,4.
Abstract
Glioblastoma stem cells (GSCs) are cells with a self-renewal ability and capacity to initiate tumors upon serial transplantation that have been linked to tumor cell heterogeneity. Most standard treatments fail to completely eradicate GSCs, causing the recurrence of the disease. GSCs could represent one reason for the low efficacy of cancer therapy and for the short relapse time. Nonetheless, experimental data suggest that the presence of therapy-resistant GSCs could explain tumor recurrence. Therefore, to effectively target GSCs, a comprehensive understanding of their biology and the survival and developing mechanisms during treatment is mandatory. This review provides an overview of the molecular features, microenvironment, detection, and targeting strategies of GSCs, an essential information required for an efficient therapy. Despite the outstanding results in oncology, researchers are still developing novel strategies, of which one could be targeting the GSCs present in the hypoxic regions and invasive edge of the glioblastoma.Entities:
Keywords: glioblastoma; growth factor; signaling pathway; stem cell
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35562993 PMCID: PMC9100635 DOI: 10.3390/ijms23094602
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 6.208
Biomarkers of GSCs.
| Marker | Category | Origin | Involved in | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CD133/Prominin | Pantaspanglycoprotein family | Hematopoietic stem cells, endothelial progenitors, myogenic cells, and stem cells | Cell proliferation, migration, stem-cell-adjacent cell interactions | [ |
| CD34 | Transmembrane glycoprotein | Progenitor cells | Cell–cell adhesion, migration, hematopoietic stem cell attachment to the extracellular matrix | [ |
| CD44 | Glycoprotein | Stem cells | Adhesion in stem cell homing | [ |
| CD15 (SSEA-1) | Trisaccharide | Developing neural stem cells and subventricular zone | Diagnosis as specific progenitor cell marker | [ |
| Musashi-1 | RNA-binding protein | Neural stem cells | Inhibiting the mRNAs’ translation | [ |
| Nestin | Intermediate filament | Mammalian CNS stem cells during development | Tumor cell growth, metastasis, and GSCs’ self-renewal | [ |
| SOX2 and HMG box | DNA-binding protein | Multipotent neural stem cells and embryonic stem cells | Sustaining neural and embryonic stem cell pluripotency | [ |
| L1CAM (CD171) | Glycoprotein | Neural cells | Tumor growth, GSCs’ radiosensitivity, and DNA damage response regulation | [ |
Targeted therapies in glioblastoma.
| Target | Inhibitors | References |
|---|---|---|
| αvβ3 and αvβ5 integrin | Cilengitide | [ |
| EGFR | Erlotinib, gefitinib, lapatinib, cetuximab, AEE788, EKB569, ZD6474 | [ |
| PDGFR | Imatinib mesylate, sorafenib, SU011248, PTK787 | [ |
| VEGFR | Sorafenib, valatanib, sunitinib, AEE788, AZD2171, ZD6474 | [ |
| mTOR | Temsirolimus, everolimus, sirolimus, AP23573 | [ |
| PKC | Tamoxifen, enzastaurin | [ |
| Histone deacetylase | Depsipeptide, suberoylanilide hydroxamic acid | [ |
| Farnesyltransferase | Lonafarnib, tipifarnib | [ |
| Hsp90 | 17-AAG | [ |
| Histone deacetylase | Depsipeptide, suberoylanilide hydroxamic acid | [ |
| Proteasome | Bortezomib | [ |
Figure 1The role of Notch, SHH, and Wnt signaling pathways in anticancer therapy resistance. Abbreviations: SHH—Sonic hedgehog, SUFU—protein domain suppressor of fused protein, GLI—zinc finger protein, NECD—Notch extracellular domain, NICD—Notch intracellular domain, CSCs—cancer stem cells, ROS—reactive oxygen species, Jag—Notch ligand Jagged, Dll—delta-like ligand, Hes—hairy and enhancer of split, Myc—family of regulator genes and proto-oncogenes, point arrow—activation, block arrow—inhibition.