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FGFR2 Promotes Breast Tumorigenicity through Maintenance of Breast Tumor-Initiating Cells

Emerging evidence suggests that some cancers contain a population of stem-like TICs (tumor-initiating cells) and eliminating TICs may offer a new strategy to develop successful anti-cancer therapies. As molecular mechanisms underlying the maintenance of the TIC pool are poorly understood, the develo...

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Autores principales: Kim, Sungeun, Dubrovska, Anna, Salamone, Richard J., Walker, John R., Grandinetti, Kathryn B., Bonamy, Ghislain M. C., Orth, Anthony P., Elliott, Jimmy, Porta, Diana Graus, Garcia-Echeverria, Carlos, Reddy, Venkateshwar A.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3534701/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23300950
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0051671
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author Kim, Sungeun
Dubrovska, Anna
Salamone, Richard J.
Walker, John R.
Grandinetti, Kathryn B.
Bonamy, Ghislain M. C.
Orth, Anthony P.
Elliott, Jimmy
Porta, Diana Graus
Garcia-Echeverria, Carlos
Reddy, Venkateshwar A.
author_facet Kim, Sungeun
Dubrovska, Anna
Salamone, Richard J.
Walker, John R.
Grandinetti, Kathryn B.
Bonamy, Ghislain M. C.
Orth, Anthony P.
Elliott, Jimmy
Porta, Diana Graus
Garcia-Echeverria, Carlos
Reddy, Venkateshwar A.
author_sort Kim, Sungeun
collection PubMed
description Emerging evidence suggests that some cancers contain a population of stem-like TICs (tumor-initiating cells) and eliminating TICs may offer a new strategy to develop successful anti-cancer therapies. As molecular mechanisms underlying the maintenance of the TIC pool are poorly understood, the development of TIC-specific therapeutics remains a major challenge. We first identified and characterized TICs and non-TICs isolated from a mouse breast cancer model. TICs displayed increased tumorigenic potential, self-renewal, heterogeneous differentiation, and bipotency. Gene expression analysis and immunostaining of TICs and non-TICs revealed that FGFR2 was preferentially expressed in TICs. Loss of FGFR2 impaired self-renewal of TICs, thus resulting in marked decreases in the TIC population and tumorigenic potential. Restoration of FGFR2 rescued the defects in TIC pool maintenance, bipotency, and breast tumor growth driven by FGFR2 knockdown. In addition, pharmacological inhibition of FGFR2 kinase activity led to a decrease in the TIC population which resulted in suppression of breast tumor growth. Moreover, human breast TICs isolated from patient tumor samples were found enriched in a FGFR2+ population that was sufficient to initiate tumor growth. Our data suggest that FGFR2 is essential in sustaining the breast TIC pool through promotion of self-renewal and maintenance of bipotent TICs, and raise the possibility of FGFR2 inhibition as a strategy for anti-cancer therapy by eradicating breast TICs.
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spelling pubmed-35347012013-01-08 FGFR2 Promotes Breast Tumorigenicity through Maintenance of Breast Tumor-Initiating Cells Kim, Sungeun Dubrovska, Anna Salamone, Richard J. Walker, John R. Grandinetti, Kathryn B. Bonamy, Ghislain M. C. Orth, Anthony P. Elliott, Jimmy Porta, Diana Graus Garcia-Echeverria, Carlos Reddy, Venkateshwar A. PLoS One Research Article Emerging evidence suggests that some cancers contain a population of stem-like TICs (tumor-initiating cells) and eliminating TICs may offer a new strategy to develop successful anti-cancer therapies. As molecular mechanisms underlying the maintenance of the TIC pool are poorly understood, the development of TIC-specific therapeutics remains a major challenge. We first identified and characterized TICs and non-TICs isolated from a mouse breast cancer model. TICs displayed increased tumorigenic potential, self-renewal, heterogeneous differentiation, and bipotency. Gene expression analysis and immunostaining of TICs and non-TICs revealed that FGFR2 was preferentially expressed in TICs. Loss of FGFR2 impaired self-renewal of TICs, thus resulting in marked decreases in the TIC population and tumorigenic potential. Restoration of FGFR2 rescued the defects in TIC pool maintenance, bipotency, and breast tumor growth driven by FGFR2 knockdown. In addition, pharmacological inhibition of FGFR2 kinase activity led to a decrease in the TIC population which resulted in suppression of breast tumor growth. Moreover, human breast TICs isolated from patient tumor samples were found enriched in a FGFR2+ population that was sufficient to initiate tumor growth. Our data suggest that FGFR2 is essential in sustaining the breast TIC pool through promotion of self-renewal and maintenance of bipotent TICs, and raise the possibility of FGFR2 inhibition as a strategy for anti-cancer therapy by eradicating breast TICs. Public Library of Science 2013-01-02 /pmc/articles/PMC3534701/ /pubmed/23300950 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0051671 Text en © 2013 Kim et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Kim, Sungeun
Dubrovska, Anna
Salamone, Richard J.
Walker, John R.
Grandinetti, Kathryn B.
Bonamy, Ghislain M. C.
Orth, Anthony P.
Elliott, Jimmy
Porta, Diana Graus
Garcia-Echeverria, Carlos
Reddy, Venkateshwar A.
FGFR2 Promotes Breast Tumorigenicity through Maintenance of Breast Tumor-Initiating Cells
title FGFR2 Promotes Breast Tumorigenicity through Maintenance of Breast Tumor-Initiating Cells
title_full FGFR2 Promotes Breast Tumorigenicity through Maintenance of Breast Tumor-Initiating Cells
title_fullStr FGFR2 Promotes Breast Tumorigenicity through Maintenance of Breast Tumor-Initiating Cells
title_full_unstemmed FGFR2 Promotes Breast Tumorigenicity through Maintenance of Breast Tumor-Initiating Cells
title_short FGFR2 Promotes Breast Tumorigenicity through Maintenance of Breast Tumor-Initiating Cells
title_sort fgfr2 promotes breast tumorigenicity through maintenance of breast tumor-initiating cells
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3534701/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23300950
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0051671
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