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Genomic profiling of tumor initiating prostatospheres

  1. Author:
    Duhagon, M. A.
    Hurt, E. M.
    Sotelo-Silveira, J. R.
    Zhang, X. H.
    Farrar, W. L.
  2. Author Address

    [Duhagon, Maria Ana; Hurt, Elaine M.; Zhang, Xiaohu; Farrar, William L.] NCI, Canc Stem Cell Sect, Lab Canc Prevent, Frederick, MD 21702 USA. [Duhagon, Maria Ana] Univ Republica, Fac Ciencias, Dept Biol Mol & Celular, Lab Interacc Mol, Montevideo 11400, Uruguay. [Duhagon, Maria Ana] Univ Republica, Fac Med, Dept Genet, Montevideo 11800, Uruguay. [Sotelo-Silveira, Jose R.] NCI, Lab Mol Technol, Adv Technol Program, SAIC Frederick Inc, Frederick, MD 21702 USA. [Sotelo-Silveira, Jose R.] Inst Invest Biol Clemente Estable, Dept Neurobiol Mol & Celular, Montevideo 11600, Uruguay.;Duhagon, MA, NCI, Canc Stem Cell Sect, Lab Canc Prevent, 1050 Boyles St, Frederick, MD 21702 USA.;mduhagon@fcien.edu.uy
    1. Year: 2010
    2. Date: May
    3. Epub Date: 5/27/2010
  1. Journal: Bmc Genomics
    1. 11
    2. Pages: 324
  2. Type of Article: Article
  3. ISSN: 1471-2164
  1. Abstract:

    Background: The cancer stem cell (CSC) hypothesis proposes that a population of tumor cells bearing stem cell properties is responsible for the origin and maintenance of tumors. Normal and cancer stem cells possess the ability to grow in vitro as self-renewing spheres, but the molecular basis of this phenotype remains largely unknown. We intended to establish a comprehensive culture system to grow prostatospheres (PSs) from both cancer cell lines and patient tumors. We then used gene expression microarrays to gain insight on the molecular pathways that sustain the PS tumor initiating cell (TIC) phenotype. Results: Traditional stem cell medium (SCM) supplemented with Knockout(TM) SR (KO) allows the propagation of monoclonal PSs from cell lines and primary cells. PSs display gene expression and tumorigenicity hallmarks of TICs. Gene expression analysis defined a gene signature composed of 66 genes that characterize LNCaP and patient PSs. This set includes novel prostate TIC growth factors (NRP1, GDF1, JAG1), proteins implicated in cell adhesion and cytoskeletal maintenance, transcriptional regulators (MYCBP, MYBL1, ID1, ID3, FOS, ELF3, ELF4, KLF2, KLF5) and factors involved in protein biosynthesis and metabolism. Meta-analysis in Oncomine reveals that some of these genes correlate with prostate cancer status and/or progression. Reporter genes and inhibitors indicate that the Notch pathway contributes to prostatosphere growth. Conclusions: We have developed a model for the culture of PSs, and provide a genomic profile that support CSCs identity. This signature identifies novel markers and pathways that are predicted to correlate with prostate cancer evolution.

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External Sources

  1. DOI: 10.1186/1471-2164-11-324
  2. PMID: 20500816
  3. PMCID: PMC2900264
  4. WOS: 000279863700001

Library Notes

  1. Fiscal Year: FY2009-2010
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