Abstract

BackgroundAccumulating evidence indicates that cancer stem cells (CSCs) drive tumorigenesis. This suggests that CSCs should make ideal therapeutic targets. However, because CSC populations in tumors appear heterogeneous, it remains unclear how CSCs might be effectively targeted. To investigate the mechanisms by which CSC populations maintain heterogeneity during self-renewal, we established a glioma sphere (GS) forming model, to generate a population in which glioma stem cells (GSCs) become enriched. We hypothesized, based on the clonal evolution concept, that with each passage in culture, heterogeneous clonal sublines of GSs are generated that progressively show increased proliferative ability.Methodology/Principal FindingsTo test this hypothesis, we determined whether, with each passage, glioma neurosphere culture generated from four different glioma cell lines become progressively proliferative (i.e., enriched in large spheres). Rather than monitoring self-renewal, we measured heterogeneity based on neurosphere clone sizes (#cells/clone). Log-log plots of distributions of clone sizes yielded a good fit (r>0.90) to a straight line (log(% total clones) = k*log(#cells/clone)) indicating that the system follows a power-law (y = xk) with a specific degree exponent (k = −1.42). Repeated passaging of the total GS population showed that the same power-law was maintained over six passages (CV = −1.01 to −1.17). Surprisingly, passage of either isolated small or large subclones generated fully heterogeneous populations that retained the original power-law-dependent heterogeneity. The anti-GSC agent Temozolomide, which is well known as a standard therapy for glioblastoma multiforme (GBM), suppressed the self-renewal of clones, but it never disrupted the power-law behavior of a GS population.Conclusions/SignificanceAlthough the data above did not support the stated hypothesis, they did strongly suggest a novel mechanism that underlies CSC heterogeneity. They indicate that power-law growth governs the self-renewal of heterogeneous glioma stem cell populations. That the data always fit a power-law suggests that: (i) clone sizes follow continuous, non-random, and scale-free hierarchy; (ii) precise biologic rules that reflect self-organizing emergent behaviors govern the generation of neurospheres. That the power-law behavior and the original GS heterogeneity are maintained over multiple passages indicates that these rules are invariant. These self-organizing mechanisms very likely underlie tumor heterogeneity during tumor growth. Discovery of this power-law behavior provides a mechanism that could be targeted in the development of new, more effective, anti-cancer agents.

Highlights

  • Despite decades of intense research, few advanced cancers are cured by chemotherapy

  • Quantitative index (CV) to assess diversity in clone sizes generated by the glioma sphere (GS) population, we found that the coefficient of variation (CV) that was the highest among the four cell-lines tested was 1.03 at day 7 for the U87-derived GSs (Fig 1C)

  • Our study shows that quantitative analysis of tumor stem cell (SC) heterogeneity in the context of self-renewal can provide important information on mechanisms of tumor growth

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Despite decades of intense research, few advanced cancers are cured by chemotherapy. One possible explanation is that a malignant tumor is composed of multiple cell types and that in chemotherapy the wrong subtypes of cells are being targeted. Growth and progression of cancers are thought to be driven by CSCs [1,2,3,4,5,6], whereby a small sub-population of homogeneous, tumor-propagating cells continuously generates all the other cells of a malignant tumor This is why most chemotherapeutic agents are designed to target rapidly dividing cancer cells that constitute the bulk of the tumor. While many types of CSCs are known to be quiescent, brain cancer researchers have shown that glioma SCs are proliferative This provides a likely mechanism as to why more advanced cancers are not cured [1,2,7,8,9,10]. We hypothesized, based on the clonal evolution concept, that with each passage in culture, heterogeneous clonal sublines of GSs are generated that progressively show increased proliferative ability

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.