Cancer Stem Cell Quiescence and Plasticity as Major Challenges in Cancer Therapy.

Stem Cells Int

Laboratoire d'Innovation Thérapeutique, Université de Strasbourg/CNRS UMR7200, Laboratoire d'Excellence Medalis, Faculté de Pharmacie, 74 route du Rhin, 67401 Illkirch, France.

Published: July 2016

AI Article Synopsis

  • Scientists have found special types of cells in tumors called cancer stem cells (CSCs) that can resist treatment and help tumors grow.
  • These CSCs act like normal stem cells and are important for understanding how to fight cancer better.
  • The study looks at ways to find and study these CSCs, and it talks about how they can change depending on their environment, which makes treating cancer harder.

Article Abstract

Cells with stem-like properties, tumorigenic potential, and treatment-resistant phenotypes have been identified in many human malignancies. Based on the properties they share with nonneoplastic stem cells or their ability to initiate and propagate tumors in vivo, such cells were designated as cancer stem (stem-like) or tumor initiating/propagating cells. Owing to their implication in treatment resistance, cancer stem cells (CSCs) have been the subject of intense investigation in past years. Comprehension of CSCs' intrinsic properties and mechanisms they develop to survive and even enhance their aggressive phenotype within the hostile conditions of the tumor microenvironment has reoriented therapeutic strategies to fight cancer. This report provides selected examples of malignancies in which the presence of CSCs has been evidenced and briefly discusses methods to identify, isolate, and functionally characterize the CSC subpopulation of cancer cells. Relevant biological targets in CSCs, their link to treatment resistance, proposed targeting strategies, and limitations of these approaches are presented. Two major aspects of CSC physiopathology, namely, relative in vivo quiescence and plasticity in response to microenvironmental cues or treatment, are highlighted. Implications of these findings in the context of the development of new therapies are discussed.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4932171PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2016/1740936DOI Listing

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