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Metastatic neuroblastoma cancer stem cells exhibit flexible plasticity and adaptive stemness signaling

INTRODUCTION: High-risk neuroblastoma (HR-NB) presenting with hematogenous metastasis is one of the most difficult cancers to cure. Patient survival is poor. Aggressive tumors contain populations of rapidly proliferating clonogens that exhibit stem cell properties, cancer stem cells (CSCs). Conceptu...

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Autores principales: Pandian, Vijayabaskar, Ramraj, Satishkumar, Khan, Faizan H, Azim, Tasfia, Aravindan, Natarajan
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4396071/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25888913
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13287-015-0002-8
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author Pandian, Vijayabaskar
Ramraj, Satishkumar
Khan, Faizan H
Azim, Tasfia
Aravindan, Natarajan
author_facet Pandian, Vijayabaskar
Ramraj, Satishkumar
Khan, Faizan H
Azim, Tasfia
Aravindan, Natarajan
author_sort Pandian, Vijayabaskar
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: High-risk neuroblastoma (HR-NB) presenting with hematogenous metastasis is one of the most difficult cancers to cure. Patient survival is poor. Aggressive tumors contain populations of rapidly proliferating clonogens that exhibit stem cell properties, cancer stem cells (CSCs). Conceptually, CSCs that evade intensive multimodal therapy dictate tumor progression, relapse/recurrence, and poor clinical outcomes. Herein, we investigated the plasticity and stem-cell related molecular response of aggressive metastatic neuroblastoma cells that fit the CSC model. METHODS: Well-characterized clones of metastatic site-derived aggressive cells (MSDACs) from a manifold of metastatic tumors of clinically translatable HR-NB were characterized for their CSC fit by examining epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT) (E-cadherin, N-Cadherin), survival (NFκB P65, p50, IκB and pIκB) and drug resistance (ABCG2) by immunoblotting; pluripotency maintenance (Nanog, SOX2) by immunofluorescence; and EMT and stemness related transcription of 93 genes by QPCR profiling. Plasticity of MSDACs under sequential alternation of culture conditions with serum and serum-free stem-cell conditions was assessed by clonal expansion (BrdU incorporation), tumorosphere formation (anchorage independent growth), EMT and stemness related transcriptome (QPCR profiling) and validated with MYC, SOX2, EGFR, NOTCH1 and CXCL2 immunoblotting. RESULTS: HR-NB MSDACs maintained in alternated culture conditions, serum-free stem cell medium to growth medium with serum and vice versa identified its flexible revocable plasticity characteristics. We observed signatures of stem cell-related molecular responses consistent with phenotypic conversions. Successive reintroduction to the favorable niche not only regained identical EMT, self-renewal capacity, pluripotency maintenance, and other stem cell-related signaling events, but also instigated additional events depicting aggressive adaptive plasticity. CONCLUSIONS: Together, these results demonstrated the flexible plasticity of HR-NB MSDACs that typically fit the CSC model, and further identified the intrinsic adaptiveness of the successive phenotype switching that clarifies the heterogeneity of HR-NB. Moreover, the continuous ongoing acquisition of stem cell-related molecular rearrangements may hold the key to the switch from favorable disease to HR-NB. ELECTRONIC SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIAL: The online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s13287-015-0002-8) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
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spelling pubmed-43960712015-04-14 Metastatic neuroblastoma cancer stem cells exhibit flexible plasticity and adaptive stemness signaling Pandian, Vijayabaskar Ramraj, Satishkumar Khan, Faizan H Azim, Tasfia Aravindan, Natarajan Stem Cell Res Ther Research INTRODUCTION: High-risk neuroblastoma (HR-NB) presenting with hematogenous metastasis is one of the most difficult cancers to cure. Patient survival is poor. Aggressive tumors contain populations of rapidly proliferating clonogens that exhibit stem cell properties, cancer stem cells (CSCs). Conceptually, CSCs that evade intensive multimodal therapy dictate tumor progression, relapse/recurrence, and poor clinical outcomes. Herein, we investigated the plasticity and stem-cell related molecular response of aggressive metastatic neuroblastoma cells that fit the CSC model. METHODS: Well-characterized clones of metastatic site-derived aggressive cells (MSDACs) from a manifold of metastatic tumors of clinically translatable HR-NB were characterized for their CSC fit by examining epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT) (E-cadherin, N-Cadherin), survival (NFκB P65, p50, IκB and pIκB) and drug resistance (ABCG2) by immunoblotting; pluripotency maintenance (Nanog, SOX2) by immunofluorescence; and EMT and stemness related transcription of 93 genes by QPCR profiling. Plasticity of MSDACs under sequential alternation of culture conditions with serum and serum-free stem-cell conditions was assessed by clonal expansion (BrdU incorporation), tumorosphere formation (anchorage independent growth), EMT and stemness related transcriptome (QPCR profiling) and validated with MYC, SOX2, EGFR, NOTCH1 and CXCL2 immunoblotting. RESULTS: HR-NB MSDACs maintained in alternated culture conditions, serum-free stem cell medium to growth medium with serum and vice versa identified its flexible revocable plasticity characteristics. We observed signatures of stem cell-related molecular responses consistent with phenotypic conversions. Successive reintroduction to the favorable niche not only regained identical EMT, self-renewal capacity, pluripotency maintenance, and other stem cell-related signaling events, but also instigated additional events depicting aggressive adaptive plasticity. CONCLUSIONS: Together, these results demonstrated the flexible plasticity of HR-NB MSDACs that typically fit the CSC model, and further identified the intrinsic adaptiveness of the successive phenotype switching that clarifies the heterogeneity of HR-NB. Moreover, the continuous ongoing acquisition of stem cell-related molecular rearrangements may hold the key to the switch from favorable disease to HR-NB. ELECTRONIC SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIAL: The online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s13287-015-0002-8) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users. BioMed Central 2015-02-20 /pmc/articles/PMC4396071/ /pubmed/25888913 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13287-015-0002-8 Text en © Pandian et al.; licensee BioMed Central. 2015 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly credited. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.
spellingShingle Research
Pandian, Vijayabaskar
Ramraj, Satishkumar
Khan, Faizan H
Azim, Tasfia
Aravindan, Natarajan
Metastatic neuroblastoma cancer stem cells exhibit flexible plasticity and adaptive stemness signaling
title Metastatic neuroblastoma cancer stem cells exhibit flexible plasticity and adaptive stemness signaling
title_full Metastatic neuroblastoma cancer stem cells exhibit flexible plasticity and adaptive stemness signaling
title_fullStr Metastatic neuroblastoma cancer stem cells exhibit flexible plasticity and adaptive stemness signaling
title_full_unstemmed Metastatic neuroblastoma cancer stem cells exhibit flexible plasticity and adaptive stemness signaling
title_short Metastatic neuroblastoma cancer stem cells exhibit flexible plasticity and adaptive stemness signaling
title_sort metastatic neuroblastoma cancer stem cells exhibit flexible plasticity and adaptive stemness signaling
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4396071/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25888913
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13287-015-0002-8
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