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Association of reactive oxygen species levels and radioresistance in cancer stem cells

Authors :
Diehn, Maximilian
Cho, Robert W.
Lobo, Neethan A.
Kalisky, Tomer
Dorie, Mary Jo
Kulp, Angela N.
Qian, Dalong
Lam, Jessica S.
Ailles, Laurie E.
Wong, Manzhi
Joshua, Benzion
Kaplan, Michael J.
Wapnir, Irene
Dirbas, Frederick M.
Somlo, George
Garberoglio, Carlos
Paz, Benjamin
Shen, Jeannie
Lau, Sean K.
Quake, Stephen R.
Brown, J. Martin
Weissman, Irving L.
Clarke, Michael F.
Source :
Nature. April 9, 2009, Vol. 458 Issue 7239, p780, 6 p.
Publication Year :
2009

Abstract

The metabolism of oxygen, although central to life, produces reactive oxygen species (ROS) that have been implicated in processes as diverse as cancer, cardiovascular disease and ageing. It has recently been shown that central nervous system stem cells (1,2) and haematopoietic stem cells and early progenitors (3-6) contain lower levels of ROS than their more mature progeny, and that these differences are critical for maintaining stem cell function. We proposed that epithelial tissue stem cells and their cancer stem cell (CSC) counterparts may also share this property. Here we show that normal mammary epithelial stem cells contain lower concentrations of ROS than their more mature progeny cells. Notably, subsets of CSCs in some human and murine breast tumours contain lower ROS levels than corresponding non-tumorigenic cells (NTCs). Consistent with ROS being critical mediators of ionizing-radiation- induced cell killing (7,8), CSCs in these tumours develop less DNA damage and are preferentially spared after irradiation compared to NTCs. Lower ROS levels in CSCs are associated with increased expression of free radical scavenging systems. Pharmacological depletion of ROS scavengers in CSCs markedly decreases their clonogenicity and results in radiosensitization. These results indicate that, similar to normal tissue stem cells, subsets of CSCs in some tumours contain lower ROS levels and enhanced ROS defences compared to their non-tumorigenic progeny, which may contribute to tumour radioresistance.<br />We began by addressing whether the low ROS concentrations that seem to be critical for self-renewal of haematopoietic stem cells (HSCS) (3,5) are also a property of mammary epithelial stem [...]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00280836
Volume :
458
Issue :
7239
Database :
Gale General OneFile
Journal :
Nature
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsgcl.198414231