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Telomerase and pluripotency factors jointly regulate stemness in pancreatic cancer stem cells

Authors :
German Cancer Aid
German Research Foundation
The Hector Foundation
Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España)
Asociación Española Contra el Cáncer
Ulm University
Walter, Karolin
Rodriguez-Aznar, Eva
Ventura Ferreira, Monica S.
Frappart, Pierre-Olivier
Dittrich, Tabea
Tiwary, Kanishka
Meessen, Sabine
Lerma, L.
Daiss, Nora
Schulte, Lucas-Alexander
Najafova, Zeynab
Arnold, Frank
Usachov, Valentyn
Azoitei, Ninel
Erkan, Mert M.
Lechel, André
Brümmendorf, Tim H.
Seufferlein, Thomas
Kleger, Alexander
Tabarés, E.
German Cancer Aid
German Research Foundation
The Hector Foundation
Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España)
Asociación Española Contra el Cáncer
Ulm University
Walter, Karolin
Rodriguez-Aznar, Eva
Ventura Ferreira, Monica S.
Frappart, Pierre-Olivier
Dittrich, Tabea
Tiwary, Kanishka
Meessen, Sabine
Lerma, L.
Daiss, Nora
Schulte, Lucas-Alexander
Najafova, Zeynab
Arnold, Frank
Usachov, Valentyn
Azoitei, Ninel
Erkan, Mert M.
Lechel, André
Brümmendorf, Tim H.
Seufferlein, Thomas
Kleger, Alexander
Tabarés, E.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

To assess the role of telomerase activity and telomere length in pancreatic CSCs we used different CSC enrichment methods (CD133, ALDH, sphere formation) in primary patient-derived pancreatic cancer cells. We show that CSCs have higher telomerase activity and longer telomeres than bulk tumor cells. Inhibition of telomerase activity, using genetic knockdown or pharmacological inhibitor (BIBR1532), resulted in CSC marker depletion, abrogation of sphere formation in vitro and reduced tumorigenicity in vivo. Furthermore, we identify a positive feedback loop between stemness factors (NANOG, OCT3/4, SOX2, KLF4) and telomerase, which is essential for the self-renewal of CSCs. Disruption of the balance between telomerase activity and stemness factors eliminates CSCs via induction of DNA damage and apoptosis in primary patient-derived pancreatic cancer samples, opening future perspectives to avoid CSC-driven tumor relapse. In the present study, we demonstrate that telomerase regulation is critical for the “stemness” maintenance in pancreatic CSCs and examine the effects of telomerase inhibition as a potential treatment option of pancreatic cancer. This may significantly promote our understanding of PDAC tumor biology and may result in improved treatment for pancreatic cancer patients.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1333181763
Document Type :
Electronic Resource