| Literature DB >> 35800881 |
Shweta Bisht1, Manisha Nigam1, Shyam S Kunjwal2, Plygun Sergey3,4, Abhay Prakash Mishra4,5, Javad Sharifi-Rad6.
Abstract
Cancer is characterized by an abnormal growth of the cells in an uncontrolled manner. These cells have the potential to invade and can eventually turn into malignancy, leading to highly fatal forms of tumor. Small subpopulations of cancer cells that are long-lived with the potential of excessive self-renewal and tumor formation are called cancer stem cells (CSCs) or cancer-initiating cells or tumor stem cells. CSCs can be found in tissues, such as breast, brain, lung, liver, ovary, and testis; however, their origin is still a matter of debate. These cells can differentiate and possess self-renewal capacity maintained by numerous intracellular signal transduction pathways, such as the Wnt/β-catenin signaling, Notch signaling, transforming growth factor-β signaling, and Hedgehog signaling. They can also contribute to numerous malignancies and are an important reason for tumor recurrence and metastasis because they are resistant to the known therapeutic strategies that mainly target the bulk of the tumor cells. This review contains collected and compiled information after analyzing published works of the last three decades. The goal was to gather information of recent breakthroughs related to CSCs, strategies to target CSCs' niche (e.g., nanotechnology with tumor biology), and their signaling pathways for cancer therapy. Moreover, the role of metformin, an antidiabetic drug, acting as a chemotherapeutic agent on CSCs by inhibiting cellular transformation and its selective killing is also addressed.Entities:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35800881 PMCID: PMC9256444 DOI: 10.1155/2022/9653244
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stem Cells Int Impact factor: 5.131
Figure 1Theories of origin of cancer stem cells. There are three possible theories: (i) CSCs could have possibly originated either from normal stem cells when they underwent mutation or oncogenic transformation, (ii) from progenitor cells who also undergone mutations, and (iii) from the fully differentiated cells that undergone several mutations via dedifferentiation (curved black arrows indicate self-renewal, while the straight arrows indicate the expression promotion).
Similarities between NSCs and CSCs [5, 7, 9, 10].
| Common features associated with NSCs and CSCs |
|---|
| (i) Unlimited proliferation potential and self-renewal property. |
|
|
| (ii) Regulation of their self-renewability by using common signaling pathways like Wnt/ |
|
|
| (iii) Expression of similar surface receptors such as CD133, CXCR4, and a6 integrin. |
|
|
| (iv) Share same telomere-lengthening mechanisms for replicative ability. |
|
|
| (v) Possess high nuclear to cytoplasmic ratio as well as increased expression of antiapoptotic genes. |
Theories suggesting origin of CSCs [11, 12].
| Theories | Explanations |
|---|---|
| CSCs derived from normal stem cells | This theory suggests that for promoting their self-renewal, cancer cells utilize the regulatory pathways of existing stem cells. |
| In comparison to mature differentiated cells, the characteristic property of self-renewal provides a longer life span to stem cells. | |
| Therefore, hypothetically mature cells with limited life span do not undergo multiple mutations which are essential for tumor formation and metastasis. | |
|
| |
| CSCs derived from progenitor cells | Progenitor cells having the partial ability for self-renewal are more abundant in the adult tissue than the stem cells which form the basis of this hypothesis. |
|
| |
| CSCs derived from differentiated cells | It suggests that there is the probability that a tissue which has enough population of differentiated cells could undergo an essential sequence of events for dedifferentiation. These differentiated cells upon induction of epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) acquire stem cell-like phenotype and formation of CSCs. |
Dissimilarities between NSCs and CSCs [5, 7, 9, 10].
| Characteristic features | Normal stem cells | Cancer stem cells |
|---|---|---|
| Occurrence | Present in the small percentage among all adult normal tissues and organs like skin/hair follicles, heart, and mammary glands | Present in small percentage within the tumor in the human breast, lung, liver, gall bladder, and brain cancers |
| Origin | Derived from embryonic and adult stem cells | Not specific. |
| Self-renewal property | Extensive proliferative potential with limited growth | Extensive proliferative potential with indefinite growth |
| Differentiation property | Highly regulated | Highly dysregulated that can initiate tumorigenesis |
| Stem cell niche | Supportive and provides homeostasis maintenance | Altered and deregulated due to dominant proliferation-promoting signals |
| Chromosomal arrangement | Stable and normally diploid with relatively long telomeres | Aneuploid having short telomeres |
| Therapeutic treatments | Moderately sensitive | Highly resistant |
| Function | Maintaining tissue homeostasis and regenerating damaged tissue | Recurrence and progression of tumor |
Figure 2Crosstalk between CSCs and their niches. Cells present in the CSC niche produce some factors that stimulate self-renewal and angiogenesis and secrete factors involved in tumor cell invasion and metastasis. MSCs secrete CXCL12, IL-6, and IL-8 (the black arrows indicate the expression promotion) which promote CSC stemness via upregulating NF-κB. To attract more MSCs towards CSCs, the latter also secretes IL-6. Gremlin 1 is an antagonist produced by MSCs to boost up the undifferentiated state. The tumor cells present around the CSC produce IL-4 which stimulates TH2 and further produce TNF-α for upregulating the NF-κB signaling. GM-CSF, G-CSF, and M-CSF are also produced by the same tumor cell to induce the expansion of some immune cells such as TAMs, TANs, MDSCs, and DCs. To enhance the plasticity of CSCs, TNF-α and TGF-β are produced by TAM to promote the NF-κB-dependent or TGF-β-dependent EMT. TGF-β is also being produced by TAMs to stimulate the Treg cells. TAM, Treg, and hypoxic microenvironment also inhibit CD8+ T cell, NK cell cytotoxicity, and phagocytosis of macrophages thus inhibiting immunosurveillance (red arrows depicting inhibition). Hypoxic microenvironment increases the concentration of ROS, promotes cell survival, and induces EMT via the TGF-β signaling pathway. The downregulated c-Myc expression inhibits cell proliferation under hypoxia and enhances stemness. CXCL12 is produced by CAF to promote angiogenesis. Under hypoxic microenvironment, CSCs and ECs produce VEGF, which further induces angiogenesis. Nitric oxide production via the Notch signaling pathways leads to the self-renewal of CSCs. CAFs also produce TNC, HGF, and MMP2/3/9, which help in the enhancement of the Wnt and Notch signaling. It also produces MMP10 which promotes ECM degradation and remodeling thus enhances the CSC's stemness.
Figure 3Structural and functional organization of hypoxic inducible factors (HIFs). HIF is a heterodimeric complex composed of an oxygen-dependent α-subunit (HIF-α) and an oxygen-insensitive β-subunit (HIF-β). The HIF-α has three subunits (HIF-1α, HIF-2α, and HIF-3α). The regulation of HIF-1α and HIF-2α is done by oxygen tension and is ubiquitously expressed in the normal tissue, whereas the HIF-1β is the subunit of HIF-β. The carboxy-terminal domain (CTD) of HIF-1α and HIF-2α based on their regulation is divided (indicated by black arrows) into two domains: ODD (regulates stability) and TAD (regulates transcriptional activity via two transactivation domains (TADs))—(i) N-TAD and (ii) C-TAD. Some nuclear localization signals (NLS) are present in both the C and N-termini of the α-subunits such as N-NLS and C-NLS that give it the direction towards the nucleus.
Figure 4Role of HIFs in CSCs. Under hypoxia, HIF-1 is formed after the dimerization of HIF-1α with HIF-1β and binds to the HRE (HIF-responsive element) present at the DNA. This binding results in the transcription of the targeted genes (HK1, PGK1, TP11, and BNIP3) (depicted in pink boxes) and regulates the various cellular processes like survival, angiogenesis, apoptosis, invasion, metastasis, metabolism, therapeutic resistance, and DNA repair.
Markers used for identification of CSCs in tumors [19].
| Cancer type | Markers for CSCs | Molecular weight (kDa) | Chromosomal location (in human) | Description of the markers | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Acute myeloid leukemia | CD10+ | 100 | 3q25.2 | Inhibits peptide hormones like glucagon, bradykinin, and oxytocin. | [ |
| CD19+ | 95 | 16p11.2 | Involved in class of molecules of signal transduction and regulates differentiation of B-lymphocyte. | [ | |
| CD20+ | 33-37 | 11q12.2 | Helps in the development of plasma cells from the differentiated B cells. | [ | |
| CD34+ | 105-120 | 1q32.2 | Helps in the attachment of stem cells to bone marrow. | [ | |
| CD38− | 42 | 4p15.32 | Acts as an intracellular messenger for Ca2+ mobilization and also acts as a prognostic marker for patients suffering from chronic lymphocytic leukemia. | [ | |
| CD44+ | 85-250 | 11p13 | Cell surface protein when targeted leads to the eradication of leukemic stem cells. | [ | |
| CD45RA+ | 205-220 | 1q31.3-q32.1 | Acts as a class of activation regulators for leukocytes. | [ | |
| CD71+ | 190 | 3q29 | Acts as a transferrin receptor essential for the development of nerve. | [ | |
| CD123+ | 70 | Xp22.3 and Yp13.3 | Acts as an interleukin-specific subunit of the cytokine receptor which is heterodimeric. | [ | |
|
| |||||
| Brain cancer | A2B5+ | — | — | Acts as a monoclonal antibody specific of polysialogangliosides and to a lesser extent of polysialoproteins. It helps to identify the subpopulations of nerve cells in the CNS. | [ |
| CD36+ | 85 | 7q21.11 | Acts as the main glycoprotein, is present on the surface of platelet, and functions as an adhesion molecule. | [ | |
| CD44+ | 85-220 | 11p13 | Acts as a glycoprotein, which gets knockdown in glioblastoma xenograft models resulting in the inhibition of cell growth and improved response to chemotherapy. | [ | |
| CD49f+ | 125 | 2q31.1 | Acts as a subunit of the family of laminin receptors, which has been used to detect TICs. | [ | |
| CD90+ | 25-35 | 11q23.3 | Acts as a glycoprotein that is required for T cell adhesion and signal transduction. | [ | |
| CD133+ | 115-125 | 4p15.32 | Acts as a transmembrane glycoprotein that forms spheres, produces tumors | [ | |
| EGFR+ | 170-180 | 7p11.2 | Promotes proliferative migration in the tumors by binding to the epidermal growth factor. | [ | |
| L1CAM+ | 200-220 | Xq28 | Acts as an adhesion molecule and is important for development, neuronal migration, and differentiation of the nervous system. | [ | |
|
| |||||
| Breast cancer | ALDH+ | 54 | 9q21.13 | Acts as an enzyme responsible for providing resistance to cell. | [ |
| CD44+/CD24− | 85-250/35-45 | 11p13/6q21 | Glycoprotein plays a role in the process of cellular migration and self-renewal. | [ | |
| CD49f+ | 125 | 2q31.1 | Acts as a protein of the integrin family, which is present on the membrane and is responsible for signaling and cell surface adhesion. | [ | |
| CD90+ | 25-35 | 11q23.3 | Acts as a glycoprotein that is required for T cell adhesion and signal transduction. | [ | |
| CD133+ | 115-125 | 4p15.32 | Lipid composition in the cell membranes is maintained by this transmembrane glycoprotein. | [ | |
| CD44+ | 85-250 | 11p13 | Monitors variations in ECM and therefore influences cell growth, survival, and differentiation. | [ | |
| CD44v6+ | 85-250 | 11p13 | Is responsible for cellular migration and adhesion. | [ | |
|
| |||||
| Cervical cancer | ABCG2+ | 72 | 4q22.1 | Is among the largest families of transmembrane proteins that is implicated in providing resistance to camptothecin analogues and mitoxantrone. | [ |
| ALDH+ | 54 | 9q21.13 | Marker possesses the ability to self-renew and differentiate and has enhanced tumorigenicity. | [ | |
| CD49f+ | 125 | 2q31.1 | In the presence of this marker, the cells can self-renew, enhance tumorigenic capabilities, and increase resistance to ionizing radiation. | [ | |
| CD133+ | 115-125 | 4p15.32 | Acts as a glycoprotein having 5 transmembrane domains that help in detecting the tumor. | [ | |
| CD44+ | 85-250 | 11p13 | Acts as a marker that causes tumor invasiveness and metastasis. | [ | |
| CD49f+ | 125 | 2q31.1 | Acts as a subunit of the family of laminin receptors, which has been used to detect TICs. | [ | |
| CD133+ | 115-125 | 4p15.32 | Acts as a biomarker that plays a role in cell-cell and cell-matrix contact formation. | [ | |
| CD166+ | 100-105 | 3q13.11 | Binds to CD6 which is a T cell differentiation antigen and plays a role in cell adhesion and migration. | [ | |
| CD200+ | 45-50 | 3q13.2 | Acts as a glycoprotein which is regulating immunosuppression and antitumor activity. | [ | |
| CD206+ | 162-175 | 10p12.33 | Acts as a mannose receptor that plays a major role in endocytosis, phagocytosis, and immune homeostasis | [ | |
| EpCAM+ | 40 | 2p21 | Acts as an homotypic cell adhesion molecule which is calcium-independent and can be expressed on normal epithelial cells and gastrointestinal cancers. | [ | |
|
| |||||
| Cutaneous squamous-cell carcinoma (cSCC) | CD44+ | 85-250 | 11p13 | Acts as a putative tumor cell surface marker with increased concentration in subpopulation of SCC. | [ |
| CD133+ | 115-125 | 4p15.32 | Transmembrane glycoprotein and its upregulation play an important role in tumorigenic processes and development of CSCs. | [ | |
|
| |||||
| Esophageal cancer | ALDH+ | 54 | 9q21.13 | Acts as an intracellular enzyme that helps in detoxifying aldehydes and regulating the conversion of retinoic acid from retinol. | [ |
| CD44+ | 85-250 | 11p13 | Receptor that acts as an activator for the tyrosine kinase receptor, thus increases tumor cell proliferation via MAPK. | [ | |
| CD90+ | 25-35 | 11q23.3 | Acts as a surface glycoprotein whose expression can lead to tumor heterogeneity and malignancy. | [ | |
| CD133+ | 115-125 | 4p15.32 | Acts as a transmembrane glycoprotein that forms spheres, gives rise to tumors | [ | |
|
| |||||
| Gall bladder cancer | CD44+/CD133+ | 85-250/115-125 | 11p13/4p15.32 | Act as the potential markers of CSCs and detect their expression in primary GBC as well as in the GBC-SD cell line. | [ |
|
| |||||
| Head and neck squamous cell carcinoma | ALDH+ | 54 | 9q21.13 | Acts as an intracellular enzyme that refines for cancer stem cells and involved in EMT. | [ |
| CD44+ | 85-250 | 11p13 | Acts as a cell-surface glycoprotein, acts as a receptor for hyaluronic acid, and is involved in the process of cell adhesion and migration associated with tumor progression and metastatic spread of HNSCC. | [ | |
| CD133+ | 115-125 | 4p15.32 | Transmembrane glycoprotein and cells possessing this glycoprotein found to have high clonogenicity, invasiveness, and tumorigenicity and are also resistant to paclitaxel. | [ | |
|
| |||||
| Laryngeal cancer | ALDH+ | 54 | 9q21.13 | Intracellular enzyme and cells using it as a biomarker possess increased potential to proliferate. | [ |
| CD44+ | 85-250 | 11p13 | Acts as a cell surface glycoprotein whose overexpression signifies the aggressiveness and a prognostic factor in LC. | [ | |
| CD133+ | 115-125 | 4p15.32 | Acts as a putative CSC marker and is also identified in the human laryngeal tumor Hep-2 cell line as a marker of CSCs. | [ | |
|
| |||||
| Liver cancer | CD13+ | 150-170 | 15q26.1 | Acts as a receptor of human coronavirus strain, causing infection in upper respiratory tract and leukemia. | [ |
| CD24+ | 35-45 | 6q21 | Acts as a marker that during metastasis, it increases blood flow in the tumor. | [ | |
| CD44+ | 85-250 | 11p13 | Acts as a glycoprotein that plays a role in the process of cellular migration and self-renewal. | [ | |
| CD133+ | 115-125 | 4p15.32 | Acts as a transmembrane glycoprotein that forms spheres, produces tumors | [ | |
| CD206+ | 162-175 | 10p12.33 | Acts as a biomarker that can predict the progression of liver cancer. | [ | |
| EpCAM+ | 40 | 2p21 | Regulates EMT, stemness, and metastasis of cells via the PTEN/AKT/mTOR pathway. | [ | |
| OV-6+ | — | — | Acts as a mouse monoclonal antibody raised against isolated hepatic oval cells. It acts as a marker for oval cells in rat and hepatic stem cells. | [ | |
| CD44+ | 85-250 | 11p13 | Acts as a transmembrane glycoprotein that is involved in various processes like invasion, migration, and adhesion. | [ | |
| CD87+ | 32-56 | 19q13 | Acts as a receptor used to activate urokinase plasminogen and affecting many normal and pathological processes which are associated with plasminogen activation of the cell surface and local degradation of extracellular matrices. | [ | |
| CD90+ | 25-35 | 11q23.3 | Surface molecular marker of CSCs and cells possessing this marker have higher proliferation, self-renewal, and tumorigenic capacity. | [ | |
| CD133+ | 115-125 | 4p15.32 | Acts as a transmembrane glycoprotein that forms spheres, produces tumors | [ | |
| CD166+ | 100-105 | 3q13.11 | Expressed on the cell surface by interacting with the tumor cells via heterotypically or homotypically. | [ | |
|
| |||||
| Malignant mesothelioma | CD9+ | 24 | 12p13.31 | Acts as a glycoprotein responsible for differentiation, adhesion, and signal transduction in normal cell and movement and metastasis in cancer cell. | [ |
| CD24+ | 35-45 | 6q21 | Acts as a marker which is present on the cells and leads to proliferation via an asymmetric cell division-like manner. | [ | |
| CD26+ | 110 | 2q24.2 | Acts as an intrinsic membrane-bound glycoprotein and a member of serine exopeptidase family. | [ | |
|
| |||||
| Melanoma | ALDH+ | 54 | 9q21.13 | Intracellular enzyme and those cells using it as a biomarker possess increased potential to proliferate. | [ |
| CD133+ | 115-125 | 4p15.32 | Acts as a transmembrane glycoprotein that forms spheres and generates tumors | [ | |
| CD271+ | 45 | 17q21.33 | Acts as a receptor for nerve growth factor and mediates cell proliferation and nerve cell death. | [ | |
| CD27+ | 50-55 | 12p13.31 | Acts as a transmembrane glycoprotein that controls B cell activation and the production of immunoglobulins. | [ | |
| CD138− | 92 | 2p24.1 | Is a part of the syndecan proteoglycan family that involves in cell proliferation and differentiation and association between cells and matrices. | [ | |
|
| |||||
| Nasopharyngeal cancer | ALDH+ | 54 | 9q21.13 | Intracellular enzyme and those cells using it as a biomarker possess increased potential to proliferate. | [ |
| EpCAM+ | 40 | 2p21 | Regulates EMT, stemness, and metastasis of cells via the PTEN/AKT/mTOR pathway. | [ | |
| CD44+ | 85-250 | 11p13 | Monitors variations in ECM and therefore influences cell growth, survival, and differentiation. | [ | |
| CD133+ | 115-125 | 4p15.32 | Glycoprotein is expressed in many tumor cells lines. | [ | |
|
| |||||
| Oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC) | CD44+/CD24− | 85-250/35-45 | 11p13/6q21 | Receptor used for hyaluronic acid and it acts as an activator for the tyrosine kinase receptor, thus increases proliferation of tumor cells via MAPK. | [ |
| ITGA7+ | 128.9 | 12q13.2 | Acts as an integrin responsible for metastasis, cell migration, morphogenesis, and differentiation, and during the process of myogenesis, it plays a role in differentiation and migration. | [ | |
|
| |||||
| Ovarian cancer | ALDH+ | 54 | 9q21.13 | Only a detectable marker was expressed in all primary tumors. | [ |
| CD24+ | 35-45 | 6q21 | Acts as a biomarker which defines an ovarian cancer-initiating cell population. | [ | |
| CD44+/CD117+ | 85-250/ | 11p13 | Acts as a class of transmembrane receptors classified as stem cell factors. | [ | |
| CD133+ | 115-125 | 4p15.32 | Acts as a transmembrane glycoprotein that forms spheres and generates tumors | [ | |
|
| |||||
| Pancreatic cancer | ABCG2+ | 72 | 4q22.1 | Acts as a membrane protein which is a part of ABC transporters and involves in the drug-resistant properties of CSCs. | [ |
| ALDH+ | 54 | 9q21.13 | Is associated with the tumorigenic cells present in the pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma. | [ | |
| CD44+/CD24+/EpCAM+ | 85-250/35-45/40 | 11p13/6q21/2p21 | Acts as a biomarker present on the cells which possesses the ability to form tumors. | [ | |
| CD133+ | 115-125 | 4p15.32 | Acts as a transmembrane glycoprotein that forms spheres and generates tumors | [ | |
| CXCR4+ | 40 | 2q22.1 | Is associated with the patient's prognosis having pancreatic tumors and can be used for targeting tumors. | [ | |
|
| |||||
| Prostate cancer |
| 160 | 5q11.2 | Acts as a receptor required for cell adhesion and recognition. | [ |
| ALDH+ | 54 | 9q21.13 | Acts as an enzyme whose increased activity can be used for isolating human prostate cancer cells with enhanced properties of clonogenesis and migration | [ | |
| CD44+ | 85-250 | 11p13 | Acts as a receptor used for hyaluronic acid, and it acts as an activator for the tyrosine kinase receptor, thus increases proliferation of tumor cells via MAPK. | [ | |
| CD166+ | 100-105 | 3q13.11 | Acts as a surface marker used for enrichment of both murine and human prostate tissue stem or progenitor cells on the basis of | [ | |
| CD133+ | 115-125 | 4p15.32 | Acts as a cell surface marker used to identify CSCs in prostate cancer cell lines. | [ | |
| CXCR4+ | 40 | 2q22.1 | Acts as a receptor for CXC chemokine function with CD4 protein to facilitate the entry of HIV into cells. | [ | |
| E-cadherin+ | 75-80 | 16q22.1 | Acts as a key permissive factor that enables | [ | |
| EZH2+ | 43.5 | 7q36.1 | Acts as a member of polycomb family which is essential in the CNS. | [ | |
|
| |||||
| Renal cell carcinoma (RCC) | ALDH+ | 54 | 9q21.13 | Acts as a biomarker that promotes formation of sphere, clonogenicity, proliferation, and invasion of the cells. | [ |
| CD44+ | 85-250 | 11p13 | Promotes various signaling pathways including activation of MAPK, PI3K/AKT, RTK, and TGF | [ | |
| CD105+ | 90 | 9q34.11 | Acts as a receptor present in the TGF- | [ | |
| CD133+ | 115-125 | 4p15.32 | Acts as a transmembrane glycoprotein that produces spheres by giving rise to tumors | [ | |
| CXCR4+ | 40 | 2q22.1 | Acts as a G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) with the seven transmembranes on the cell membrane known to be part of cell-stroma interactions leading to a permissive niche for metastasis. | [ | |
|
| |||||
| Stomach cancer | ALDH+ | 54 | 12q24.12 | Acts as a marker that generates chemoresistance via the Notch1 and Shh signaling. | [ |
| CD24+ | 35-45 | 6q21 | Acts as a cell surface protein that acts as a ligand for P-selectin, which is expressed on the cell surfaces of activated platelets and endothelial cells, in the process of tumor dissemination. | [ | |
| CD44+ | 85-250 | 11p13 | Cell surface receptor plays a crucial role in degradation of matrix, proliferation, and cell survival. | [ | |
| CD44v8-10+ | 85-250 | 11p13 | Is derived from CD44 having a specific class of CSCs. | [ | |
| CD49f+ | 125 | 2q31.1 | Acts as a subunit of the family of laminin receptors, which has been used for identifying TICs. | [ | |
| CD54+ | 75-115 | 19p13.2 | Acts as an adhesion molecule expressing in tumor cells which are malignant. | [ | |
| CD71+ | 190 | 3q29 | Acts as a transferrin receptor acting as a carrier protein that transports iron within the cell and helps in maintaining the cellular iron homeostasis. | [ | |
| CD90+ | 25-35 | 11q23.3 | Acts as a membrane GPI-anchored protein. | [ | |
| CD133+ | 155-125 | 4p15.32 | A marker when present in CSCs exhibits self-renewal potential and tumor formation. | [ | |
Figure 5Signaling pathways involved in cancer stem cells. (a) The JAK/STAT pathway (extreme left): JAKs get activated when ligands bind to its receptor; JAK1 and JAK2 auto and transphosphorylate each other and also phosphorylate the tyrosine residues present in the cytoplasmic domain of the receptor. STATs upon phosphorylation by JAKs form dimers and are then translocated into the nucleus to initiate the transcription of the targeted genes. (b) The Hedgehog pathway (left): Hh, when secreted from the other cells, binds to PTCH and allows the activation (indicated by black arrows) of SMO. SMO protein complex secretes Gli1/2 and translocates it into the nucleus, leading to the transcription of Hh-associated genes (depicted by purple arrows). (c) The Notch pathway (right): the binding of the delta ligand to the other cell; two different enzymes responsible for two different cleavages are ADAM10 or TACE and a metalloprotease that catalyzes the S2 cleavage and hence producing a substrate for S3 cleavage via the γ-secretase complex. Due to proteolysis, it mediates the release of NCID, which upon translocation into the nucleus starts interacting with the DNA-binding CSL protein and MAML which further activate the transcription process of the targeted genes. (d) The Wnt pathway (extreme right): Wnt ligand binds to Fz, a receptor, and induces the phosphorylation of the coreceptors, LRP5/6, which further forms the docking site for AXIN. The binding of the ligand to the receptor signals Dvl to recruit AXIN 1 along with the other kinases CK1α and GSK3β to the membrane, which interrupts the destruction complex leading to impairment of the phosphorylation of β-catenin and results in its destruction. Accumulated β-catenin then translocates from the cytoplasm to the nucleus and functions as an activator of TCF/LEF-mediated transcription of Wnt target genes.
Figure 6Signaling pathways involved in cancer stem cells. (a) The NF-κB pathway (left): TNF-α, the proinflammatory cytokine, binds to the TNF receptor and induces the formation of IKK complex, which phosphorylates IκB-a. Phosphorylation of IκB-a results in its degradation via proteasome which leads to the accumulation of p65-p50 (acting as an NF-κB) dimer into the nucleus and regulates the transcription of the targeted genes. (b) The TGF-β pathway (middle): TGFβ1 ligand upon binding to the TGF-beta receptor type-2 (TGFβR2) promotes (indicated by black arrows) the dimerization of TGFβR2 with TGFβR1, resulting in the transphosphorylation of TGFβR1. The activated TGFβR1 further activates R-SMADs (SMAD2 and SMAD3) by phosphorylation. SMAD2/3 trimerizes with a co-SMAD (SMAD4). The SMAD trimer upon localization into the nucleus activates (indicated by purple arrows) the gene transcription and promotes cell growth and survival. (c) The PI3K pathway (right): the binding of the ligand to the RTK results in the phosphorylation of the membrane lipid PIP2 via intracellular PI3K and it then converts to PIP3. PKB bounds to its docking site in PIP3, and upon phosphorylation, it gets activated by various kinases involving mTOR and DNA-dependent protein kinases, which further enhances PKB-mediated phosphorylation and the activation or repression of downstream mediators. PTEN, a phosphatase that is a negative regulator (inhibition is indicated by red arrows) of this process, helps in the dephosphorylation of PIP3 to PIP2 (the black arrows are depicting pathway activation/signal propagation).