Abstract

Most adult stem cells are in the G0 phase of the cell cycle, accounting for only a small percentage of the cells in the tissue. Thus, isolation of stem cells from tissues for further study represents a major challenge. The anti-tumor drug 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) selectively kills proliferating cells, sparing cells in the G0 phase. Thus, the objective of this study was to determine whether 5-FU can be used to enrich stem cells in a human bronchial epithelial (HBE) cell population in vitro. Side population (SP) cells were isolated from untreated HBE cells or HBE cells treated with 5-FU, and the resulting cells were subjected to colony formation assays, culturing of cell spheres, and tumorigenicity assays. Expression of Oct3/4, Sox2, PCK, and β-catenin were examined by Western blot analysis and immunofluorescence. Treatment with 5-FU increased the percentage of SP cells from 0.3% to 1.5%, and the clonogenic ability of 5-FU-treated cells was more than twofold higher than that of HBE cells. Cells that survived after 5-FU treatment exhibited a higher capacity for sphere formation. Furthermore, spheres formed from 5-FU-treated cells possessed the capacity to generate differentiated progenies. Cells treated with 5-FU also exhibited tumorigenic potential, based on tumor formation assays in nude mice, and Oct3/4-positive cell aggregates were identified in the resulting tumors. In this study, we have shown that 5-FU treatment enriched the population of cells expressing the putative embryonic markers Oct3/4 and Sox2 and exhibiting nuclear accumulation of β-catenin. Furthermore, 5-FU-treated cells expressed low levels of the epithelial differentiation marker PCK. Analysis of epigenetic modifications suggested that Oct3/4-positive cells possessed characteristics of stem cells. These results demonstrate that treatment with 5-FU can enrich the stem cell population present in a human bronchial epithelial cell line, and implicate combined treatment with 5-FU and serum-free medium as a new method for isolation of stem-like cells from the HBE cell line.

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