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Clonal dominance of CD133(+) subset population as risk factor in tumor progression and disease recurrence of human cutaneous melanoma

Chemotherapeutic refractoriness of advanced cutaneous melanoma may be linked with melanoma-initiating cells, also known as melanoma stem cells. This study aimed to determine relative risk of clonal dominance of the CD133(+) phenotype in tissues from melanoma patients with different clinical outcomes...

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Autores principales: SHARMA, BHUVNESH K., MANGLIK, V., O’CONNELL, MICHAEL, WEERARATNA, ASHANI, McCARRON, EDWARD C., BROUSSARD, JENNIFER N., DiVITO, KYLE A., SIMBULAN-ROSENTHAL, CYNTHIA M., ROSENTHAL, DEAN S., ZAPAS, JOHN L.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: D.A. Spandidos 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3583984/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22922842
http://dx.doi.org/10.3892/ijo.2012.1590
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author SHARMA, BHUVNESH K.
MANGLIK, V.
O’CONNELL, MICHAEL
WEERARATNA, ASHANI
McCARRON, EDWARD C.
BROUSSARD, JENNIFER N.
DiVITO, KYLE A.
SIMBULAN-ROSENTHAL, CYNTHIA M.
ROSENTHAL, DEAN S.
ZAPAS, JOHN L.
author_facet SHARMA, BHUVNESH K.
MANGLIK, V.
O’CONNELL, MICHAEL
WEERARATNA, ASHANI
McCARRON, EDWARD C.
BROUSSARD, JENNIFER N.
DiVITO, KYLE A.
SIMBULAN-ROSENTHAL, CYNTHIA M.
ROSENTHAL, DEAN S.
ZAPAS, JOHN L.
author_sort SHARMA, BHUVNESH K.
collection PubMed
description Chemotherapeutic refractoriness of advanced cutaneous melanoma may be linked with melanoma-initiating cells, also known as melanoma stem cells. This study aimed to determine relative risk of clonal dominance of the CD133(+) phenotype in tissues from melanoma patients with different clinical outcomes that could be applied to early diagnosis, prognosis or disease monitoring. Significant overexpression of CD133 (p<0.02) was observed by immunohistochemical staining in tissues from patients with recurrent disease versus those without disease recurrence. Relative risk analysis between these two groups suggested that the patients with recurrence or metastatic lesion had a greater than 2-fold overexpression of CD133. In addition, immunodetectable CD133 corroborated with upregulation of CD133 RNA levels (14- to 30-fold) as assessed by quantitative real-time reverse transcription-PCR (qRT-PCR) comparison of melanoma cell lines derived from patients with poor clinical outcomes and short overall survival (<10 months), vs. those derived from patients with good clinical outcomes and longer overall survival (>24 months). Further, cells derived from patients, and MACS-sorted according to their CD133 status retained their CD133-positivity (>95%) or CD133-negativity (>95%) for more than 8 passages in culture. CD133(+) cells could repopulate and form tumors (p<0.03) in athymic NCr-nu/nu mice within 8 weeks while no tumors were observed with CD133(−) phenotype (up to 200,000 cells). Taken together, the study demonstrates, for the first time, that there exists a clonal dominance of a CD133(+) population within the hierarchy of cells in cutaneous tissues from patients that have undergone successive progressive stages of melanoma, from primary to metastatic lesions. CD133, thus, provides a predictive marker of disease as well as a potential therapeutic target of high-risk melanoma.
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spelling pubmed-35839842013-03-04 Clonal dominance of CD133(+) subset population as risk factor in tumor progression and disease recurrence of human cutaneous melanoma SHARMA, BHUVNESH K. MANGLIK, V. O’CONNELL, MICHAEL WEERARATNA, ASHANI McCARRON, EDWARD C. BROUSSARD, JENNIFER N. DiVITO, KYLE A. SIMBULAN-ROSENTHAL, CYNTHIA M. ROSENTHAL, DEAN S. ZAPAS, JOHN L. Int J Oncol Articles Chemotherapeutic refractoriness of advanced cutaneous melanoma may be linked with melanoma-initiating cells, also known as melanoma stem cells. This study aimed to determine relative risk of clonal dominance of the CD133(+) phenotype in tissues from melanoma patients with different clinical outcomes that could be applied to early diagnosis, prognosis or disease monitoring. Significant overexpression of CD133 (p<0.02) was observed by immunohistochemical staining in tissues from patients with recurrent disease versus those without disease recurrence. Relative risk analysis between these two groups suggested that the patients with recurrence or metastatic lesion had a greater than 2-fold overexpression of CD133. In addition, immunodetectable CD133 corroborated with upregulation of CD133 RNA levels (14- to 30-fold) as assessed by quantitative real-time reverse transcription-PCR (qRT-PCR) comparison of melanoma cell lines derived from patients with poor clinical outcomes and short overall survival (<10 months), vs. those derived from patients with good clinical outcomes and longer overall survival (>24 months). Further, cells derived from patients, and MACS-sorted according to their CD133 status retained their CD133-positivity (>95%) or CD133-negativity (>95%) for more than 8 passages in culture. CD133(+) cells could repopulate and form tumors (p<0.03) in athymic NCr-nu/nu mice within 8 weeks while no tumors were observed with CD133(−) phenotype (up to 200,000 cells). Taken together, the study demonstrates, for the first time, that there exists a clonal dominance of a CD133(+) population within the hierarchy of cells in cutaneous tissues from patients that have undergone successive progressive stages of melanoma, from primary to metastatic lesions. CD133, thus, provides a predictive marker of disease as well as a potential therapeutic target of high-risk melanoma. D.A. Spandidos 2012-08-17 /pmc/articles/PMC3583984/ /pubmed/22922842 http://dx.doi.org/10.3892/ijo.2012.1590 Text en Copyright © 2012, Spandidos Publications http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0 This is an open-access article licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0 Unported License. The article may be redistributed, reproduced, and reused for non-commercial purposes, provided the original source is properly cited.
spellingShingle Articles
SHARMA, BHUVNESH K.
MANGLIK, V.
O’CONNELL, MICHAEL
WEERARATNA, ASHANI
McCARRON, EDWARD C.
BROUSSARD, JENNIFER N.
DiVITO, KYLE A.
SIMBULAN-ROSENTHAL, CYNTHIA M.
ROSENTHAL, DEAN S.
ZAPAS, JOHN L.
Clonal dominance of CD133(+) subset population as risk factor in tumor progression and disease recurrence of human cutaneous melanoma
title Clonal dominance of CD133(+) subset population as risk factor in tumor progression and disease recurrence of human cutaneous melanoma
title_full Clonal dominance of CD133(+) subset population as risk factor in tumor progression and disease recurrence of human cutaneous melanoma
title_fullStr Clonal dominance of CD133(+) subset population as risk factor in tumor progression and disease recurrence of human cutaneous melanoma
title_full_unstemmed Clonal dominance of CD133(+) subset population as risk factor in tumor progression and disease recurrence of human cutaneous melanoma
title_short Clonal dominance of CD133(+) subset population as risk factor in tumor progression and disease recurrence of human cutaneous melanoma
title_sort clonal dominance of cd133(+) subset population as risk factor in tumor progression and disease recurrence of human cutaneous melanoma
topic Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3583984/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22922842
http://dx.doi.org/10.3892/ijo.2012.1590
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