AI Article Synopsis

  • Scientists studied tumor cells from colorectal cancer (CRC) and found that certain cells, especially cancer stem cells (CCSCs), can grow and spread the disease.
  • They created special cell lines that help them understand how these cells behave in the body, including how they can travel through blood and form new tumors in other organs.
  • This research will help develop better tests and treatments for CRC by focusing on specific stages of the disease and finding new ways to help patients.

Article Abstract

Background: Despite their lethality and ensuing clinical and therapeutic relevance, circulating tumor cells (CTCs) from colorectal carcinoma (CRC) remain elusive, poorly characterized biological entities.

Methods And Findings: We perfected a cell system of stable, primary lines from human CRC showing that they possess the full complement of ex- and in-vivo, in xenogeneic models, characteristics of CRC stem cells (CCSCs). Here we show how tumor-initiating, CCSCs cells can establish faithful orthotopic phenocopies of the original disease, which contain cells that spread into the circulatory system. While in the vascular bed, these cells retain stemness, thus qualifying as circulating CCSCs (cCCSCs). This is followed by the establishment of lesions in distant organs, which also contain resident metastatic CCSCs (mCCSCs).

Interpretation: Our results support the concept that throughout all the stages of CRC, stemness is retained as a continuous property by some of their tumor cells. Importantly, we describe a useful standardized model that can enable isolation and stable perpetuation of human CRC's CCSCs, cCCSCs and mCCSCs, providing a useful platform for studies of CRC initiation and progression that is suitable for the discovery of reliable stage-specific biomarkers and the refinement of new patient-tailored therapies. FUND: This work was financially supported by grants from "Ministero della Salute Italiano"(GR-2011-02351534, RC1703IC36 and RC1803IC35) to Elena Binda and from "Associazione Italiana Cancro" (IG-14368) Angelo L. Vescovi. None of the above funders have any role in study design, data collection, data analysis, interpretation, writing the project.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6603803PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ebiom.2019.04.049DOI Listing

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