Findings support cancer stem cell model, with
exceptions
Study offers insights to how ovarian cancer grows – and
potential to stop it...
Findings support cancer stem cell model, with exception
Newswise, December 1, 2015 — Can any cancer cell form another
tumor, or is it only select cancer stem cells that give rise to new cancer
cells? The answer, a new study finds, is both.
Researchers at the University of Michigan Comprehensive Cancer
Center looked at human ovarian cancer cells and found that for the most part
the cancer cells generate offspring in a predictable and organized fashion:
mother cancer cells produced daughter cells and the daughter cells produced
granddaughter cells. The grandmother cells are the rare cancer stem cells that
can initiate cancer recurrence and the granddaughter cells are the bulk tumor
cells.
But in rare exceptions, the daughter cells gave rise to the
stem-like grandmother cells.
The question of whether cancer cells divide in a patterned
fashion or randomly has been hotly debated.
“Like any nature/nurture question, the answer is always both.
In general we observed that cancer cells do not divide randomly. Just like in
normal biology, we saw the pattern of stem cells giving rise to daughter cells.
But within that hierarchy, we saw rare exceptions that went against the
hierarchy,” says senior study author Ronald J. Buckanovich, M.D., Ph.D.,
associate professor of internal medicine at the University of Michigan Medical
School.
“This is very significant for how you design cancer therapies.
These stem-like cells are the really critical therapeutic targets, but the
non-stem cells need to be addressed as well,” he adds.
The researchers also found that a protein called BMP2
increased the growth of the cancer stem cells and decreased the growth of the
granddaughter cells, or the bulk tumor cells.
It’s like a conversation between
the two types of cells: When there are too many granddaughter cells, they
trigger BMP2 to increase the number of stem cells. The non-stem cells are
helping to support the growth of the stem cells to maintain an equilibrium
within the tumor.
“BMP2 tells the cancer to make more grandmothers and stop
making granddaughters. So there are fewer bulk cells. But there are more of the
aggressive, chemotherapy-resistant cells that have the ability to create new
tumors,” Buckanovich says.
When the researcher blocked BMP2, it reduced the ability of the
cancer cells to make new stem cells. But blocking BMP2 promotes the growth of
the granddaughter bulk cells.
The challenge is to target the BMP2 inhibitor to
the cancer stem cells only. This type of treatment is not currently available
to patients. Researchers are examining ways to deliver an inhibitor only to the
stem cells.
The study, which is published in PNAS, is unique because it
looked at human tissue, rather than mouse models. The cancer researchers tapped
into a microfluidic device designed by Euisik Yoon’s group at the University of
Michigan College of Engineering.
The device enabled the cells to be separated
and studied individually over time in a manner that would not be possible with
traditional methods.
“We could watch cancer cells divide in real time, actually
track and watch who’s the mother and who’s the daughter,” Buckanovich says.
“This device allowed us to study human cells instead of mouse models. We
believe it is the first instance to define a cancer hierarchy using cells from
patients.”
Additional authors: Yunjung Choi, Patrick Neal Ingram, Kun
Yang, Lan Coffman, Mangala Iyengar, Shoumei Bai, Dafydd Thomas, Euisik Yoon
Funding: Ovarian Cancer Research Fund, National Institutes of
Health grants DP200440377 and P30 CA046592
Disclosure: None
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