Colorectal carcinoma (CRC) progression is associated with an increase in PROX1+ tumor cells, which exhibit features of CRC stem cells and contribute to metastasis. Here, we aimed to provide a better understanding to the function of PROX1+ cells in CRC, investigating their progeny and their role in therapy resistance. PROX1+ cells in intestinal adenomas of ApcMin/+ mice expressed intestinal epithelial and CRC stem cell markers, and cells with high PROX1 expression could both self-renew tumor stem/progenitor cells and contribute to differentiated tumor cells. Most PROX1-lineage traced tumor cells were stem/progenitor cells, which can supply cells to multiple intestinal tumor cell lineages, whereas most lineage-traced LGR5+ tumor cells were enterocytes, indicating that PROX1+ and LGR5+ tumor stem cells have distinct differentiation programs. Although the PROX1+ tumor cells proliferated slower than PROX1- cells, irradiation increased the proportion of PROX1+ cells in human CRC cell lines, patient-derived organoids, and tumor xenografts. Furthermore, transcripts related to DNA damage repair (DDR) were enriched in PROX1+ vs. PROX1- cells in adenomas and in CRC tumor cells from patients. Experiments with PROX1 silencing and overexpression indicated that PROX1 expression enhances CRC cell colony formation following irradiation. PROX1 interacted with DDR proteins, including components of non-homologous end-joining (NHEJ) and base excision repair, and inhibition of NHEJ repair led to a decreased proportion of PROX1+ cells following irradiation. In conclusion, PROX1+ cells are irradiation-resistant tumor stem/progenitor cells capable of self-renewal and differentiation. DDR inhibitors could represent a strategy to target the treatment-resistant PROX1+ tumor stem cells.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-23-1851 | DOI Listing |
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