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Tumor Initiation Capacity and Therapy Resistance Are Differential Features of EMT-Related Subpopulations in the NSCLC Cell Line A549()

Cell lines are essential tools to standardize and compare experimental findings in basic and translational cancer research. The current dogma states that cancer stem cells feature an increased tumor initiation capacity and are also chemoresistant. Here, we identified and comprehensively characterize...

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Autores principales: Tièche, Colin Charles, Gao, Yanyun, Bührer, Elias Daniel, Hobi, Nina, Berezowska, Sabina Anna, Wyler, Kurt, Froment, Laurène, Weis, Stefan, Peng, Ren-Wang, Bruggmann, Rémy, Schär, Primo, Amrein, Michael Alex, Hall, Sean Ralph Robert, Dorn, Patrick, Kocher, Gregor, Riether, Carsten, Ochsenbein, Adrian, Schmid, Ralph Alexander, Marti, Thomas Michael
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Neoplasia Press 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6309124/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30591423
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.neo.2018.09.008
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author Tièche, Colin Charles
Gao, Yanyun
Bührer, Elias Daniel
Hobi, Nina
Berezowska, Sabina Anna
Wyler, Kurt
Froment, Laurène
Weis, Stefan
Peng, Ren-Wang
Bruggmann, Rémy
Schär, Primo
Amrein, Michael Alex
Hall, Sean Ralph Robert
Dorn, Patrick
Kocher, Gregor
Riether, Carsten
Ochsenbein, Adrian
Schmid, Ralph Alexander
Marti, Thomas Michael
author_facet Tièche, Colin Charles
Gao, Yanyun
Bührer, Elias Daniel
Hobi, Nina
Berezowska, Sabina Anna
Wyler, Kurt
Froment, Laurène
Weis, Stefan
Peng, Ren-Wang
Bruggmann, Rémy
Schär, Primo
Amrein, Michael Alex
Hall, Sean Ralph Robert
Dorn, Patrick
Kocher, Gregor
Riether, Carsten
Ochsenbein, Adrian
Schmid, Ralph Alexander
Marti, Thomas Michael
author_sort Tièche, Colin Charles
collection PubMed
description Cell lines are essential tools to standardize and compare experimental findings in basic and translational cancer research. The current dogma states that cancer stem cells feature an increased tumor initiation capacity and are also chemoresistant. Here, we identified and comprehensively characterized three morphologically distinct cellular subtypes in the non–small cell lung cancer cell line A549 and challenge the current cancer stem cell dogma. Subtype-specific cellular morphology is maintained during short-term culturing, resulting in the formation of holoclonal, meroclonal, and paraclonal colonies. A549 holoclone cells were characterized by an epithelial and stem-like phenotype, paraclone cells featured a mesenchymal phenotype, whereas meroclone cells were phenotypically intermediate. Cell-surface marker expression of subpopulations changed over time, indicating an active epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT), in vitro and in vivo. EMT has been associated with the overexpression of the immunomodulators PD-L1 and PD-L2, which were 37- and 235-fold overexpressed in para- versus holoclone cells, respectively. We found that DNA methylation is involved in epigenetic regulation of marker expression. Holoclone cells were extremely sensitive to cisplatin and radiotherapy in vitro, whereas paraclone cells were highly resistant. However, inhibition of the receptor tyrosine kinase AXL, whose expression is associated with an EMT, specifically targeted the otherwise highly resistant paraclone cells. Xenograft tumor formation capacity was 24- and 269-fold higher in holo- than mero- and paraclone cells, respectively. Our results show that A549 subpopulations might serve as a unique system to explore the network of stemness, cellular plasticity, tumor initiation capacity, invasive and metastatic potential, and chemo/radiotherapy resistance.
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spelling pubmed-63091242019-01-02 Tumor Initiation Capacity and Therapy Resistance Are Differential Features of EMT-Related Subpopulations in the NSCLC Cell Line A549() Tièche, Colin Charles Gao, Yanyun Bührer, Elias Daniel Hobi, Nina Berezowska, Sabina Anna Wyler, Kurt Froment, Laurène Weis, Stefan Peng, Ren-Wang Bruggmann, Rémy Schär, Primo Amrein, Michael Alex Hall, Sean Ralph Robert Dorn, Patrick Kocher, Gregor Riether, Carsten Ochsenbein, Adrian Schmid, Ralph Alexander Marti, Thomas Michael Neoplasia Original article Cell lines are essential tools to standardize and compare experimental findings in basic and translational cancer research. The current dogma states that cancer stem cells feature an increased tumor initiation capacity and are also chemoresistant. Here, we identified and comprehensively characterized three morphologically distinct cellular subtypes in the non–small cell lung cancer cell line A549 and challenge the current cancer stem cell dogma. Subtype-specific cellular morphology is maintained during short-term culturing, resulting in the formation of holoclonal, meroclonal, and paraclonal colonies. A549 holoclone cells were characterized by an epithelial and stem-like phenotype, paraclone cells featured a mesenchymal phenotype, whereas meroclone cells were phenotypically intermediate. Cell-surface marker expression of subpopulations changed over time, indicating an active epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT), in vitro and in vivo. EMT has been associated with the overexpression of the immunomodulators PD-L1 and PD-L2, which were 37- and 235-fold overexpressed in para- versus holoclone cells, respectively. We found that DNA methylation is involved in epigenetic regulation of marker expression. Holoclone cells were extremely sensitive to cisplatin and radiotherapy in vitro, whereas paraclone cells were highly resistant. However, inhibition of the receptor tyrosine kinase AXL, whose expression is associated with an EMT, specifically targeted the otherwise highly resistant paraclone cells. Xenograft tumor formation capacity was 24- and 269-fold higher in holo- than mero- and paraclone cells, respectively. Our results show that A549 subpopulations might serve as a unique system to explore the network of stemness, cellular plasticity, tumor initiation capacity, invasive and metastatic potential, and chemo/radiotherapy resistance. Neoplasia Press 2018-12-27 /pmc/articles/PMC6309124/ /pubmed/30591423 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.neo.2018.09.008 Text en © 2018 Published by Elsevier Inc. on behalf of Neoplasia Press, Inc. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle Original article
Tièche, Colin Charles
Gao, Yanyun
Bührer, Elias Daniel
Hobi, Nina
Berezowska, Sabina Anna
Wyler, Kurt
Froment, Laurène
Weis, Stefan
Peng, Ren-Wang
Bruggmann, Rémy
Schär, Primo
Amrein, Michael Alex
Hall, Sean Ralph Robert
Dorn, Patrick
Kocher, Gregor
Riether, Carsten
Ochsenbein, Adrian
Schmid, Ralph Alexander
Marti, Thomas Michael
Tumor Initiation Capacity and Therapy Resistance Are Differential Features of EMT-Related Subpopulations in the NSCLC Cell Line A549()
title Tumor Initiation Capacity and Therapy Resistance Are Differential Features of EMT-Related Subpopulations in the NSCLC Cell Line A549()
title_full Tumor Initiation Capacity and Therapy Resistance Are Differential Features of EMT-Related Subpopulations in the NSCLC Cell Line A549()
title_fullStr Tumor Initiation Capacity and Therapy Resistance Are Differential Features of EMT-Related Subpopulations in the NSCLC Cell Line A549()
title_full_unstemmed Tumor Initiation Capacity and Therapy Resistance Are Differential Features of EMT-Related Subpopulations in the NSCLC Cell Line A549()
title_short Tumor Initiation Capacity and Therapy Resistance Are Differential Features of EMT-Related Subpopulations in the NSCLC Cell Line A549()
title_sort tumor initiation capacity and therapy resistance are differential features of emt-related subpopulations in the nsclc cell line a549()
topic Original article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6309124/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30591423
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.neo.2018.09.008
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