learning objectives?
What is the history of cancer?
What organs are affected by cancer?
What is the molecular basis of cancer?
What is inter- and intra-tumour heterogeneity?
means that is difficult to treat the tumour as a single entity
genetic and not genetic reasons for heterogeneity
quite clear genetic differences within the same tumour or at different stages of the same tumour
What are two general models for cancer heterogeneity?
stochastic model/clonal evolution
- self renewal and differentiation are random
- various clones may co-exist (may have different sizes
- all cells have equal but low probability of initiating tumour growth
- strong influence of the microenvironment
extrinsic (mostly) and intrinsic factors
cancer stem cell model
How has the presence of stem-like cells in haematopoietic cancer been determined?
self-renewal assay in immunodeficient mice
NOD/SCID: non-obese diabetic/severe combined immunodeficiency
- cancer cells (ex: leukaemia cells) → FACS → take one subset
sublethally irradiated NOD/SCIF mice → injected with the specified CD34+ tumour cells → long-term bone marrow reconstitution
must mean they have stem cell characteristics
Presence of stem-like cells in solid tumours?
What are cancer stem cells?
cells that have the ability to generate heterogenous tumours with higher efficieny once injected at high dilution in immunocompromused mice
What properties do cancer stem cells share with normal stem cells?
What are some experimental approaches to study Cancer stem cells?
What are markers for tissue stem cells and cancer stem cells?
breast cancer
GBM/medulloblastoma
melanoma: no marker enriches tumourigenic potential vs equal tumorigenic potential of all cells
- therefore melanoma does not respond to cancer stem cell model at all
What are the self-renewal properties of cancer stem cells?
What is the multi-lineage differentiation potential of cancer stem cells?
colon cancer cells
What pathways that are involved in self-renewals are deregulated in cancer cells?
What is the role of CSCs in metastasis development?
triple positive subpopulation only
- detected as circulating tumour cells in the blood
- give rise to liver metastases
- display high invasive properties in vitro
double positive was quite able to generate primary tumours but could not metastasise
different subtypes of CSCs?
What is the role of CSCs in therapeutic resistance?
- CSCs are involved in post-treatment tumour relapse
What are the mechanisms of CSC resistance to anti-cancer therapy?
What are therapeutic implications of a pure cancer stem cell model?
not that simple
Is there a relationship between cancer stem cells and the cell of origin of cancer?
What is the link between EMT and CSCs?
What is the phenotypic plasticity of cancer cells?
consequence for therapy means you probably need combination therapy e.g. chemotherapy and CSC-targeted, elsewise you could still have tumour relapse
What are challenges for therapeutic targeting of CSCs?
Take home messages?