Abstract

Previous studies have demonstrated some tumors develop or maintain a small sub-population of cells with stem cell-like properties. This Cancer Stem Cells (CSC) may exhibit differential properties that allow their escape from traditional radiation or chemotherapy treatments and may therefore be responsible for cancer recurrence. Few studies have explored this phenomenon among oral cancer cell lines, therefore the objective of this study was to examine multiple oral cancer cell lines to determine if any or all contained subpopulations of CSCs. Multiple commercially available Oral Squamous Carcinoma Cell (OSCC) lines were obtained for this study, including SCC15, SCC25 and CAL27. Cells were cultured for CSC screening and isolation. RNA was isolated from any potential CSC isolates for biomarker screening and verification. All OSCC lines examined developed adhesion-independent tumor spheres (AiTS), a characteristic phenotype of oral CSC. Each AiTS was manually isolated for separate, independent culture and analysis. RNA extracted from the AiTS revealed differential expression of specific CSC markers, including CD44, CD133, ABCG, CXCR6 and NANOG. These biomarkers were not observed in RNA extracted from the remaining non-CSC cell cultures. Although a previous study from this group successfully isolated AiTS from one cervical and one oral cancer cell line, this may be the first study to isolate CSC from multiple oral cancer cell lines and verify both cell-surface and intracellular CSC biomarkers. These results may suggest that many tumors and oral cancers could harbor AiTS and CSC and that screening for these sub-populations may provide guidance for treatment and therapy to improve oral cancer survival rates.

Highlights

  • Previous studies have demonstrated some tumors develop or maintain a small sub-population of cells with stem cell-like properties (Chae and Kim, 2018; Tong et al, 2018; Czerwińska et al, 2018)

  • Oral Squamous Cell Carcinoma (OSCC) cell lines SCC25, SCC15 and CAL27 were cultured and passaged to screen for the presence of potential oral Cancer Stem Cells (CSC) (Fig. 1). These experiments demonstrated that each cell line produced adhesion-independent tumor spheres (AiTS) that grew into the Z-plane after the cell line becoming confluent

  • The RNA derived from the Oral Squamous Carcinoma Cell (OSCC) cell lines had an overall average concentration of 370.7 ng/uL with a range from 311.4- 412.6 ng/uL, while the RNA isolated from the AiTS had a lower overall average concentration of 256.3 ng/uL that ranged from 243.3 to 266.3 ng/uL

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Summary

Introduction

Previous studies have demonstrated some tumors develop or maintain a small sub-population of cells with stem cell-like properties (Chae and Kim, 2018; Tong et al, 2018; Czerwińska et al, 2018). The presence of CSCs may help to explain the chemoresistance and subsequent recurrence of these cancers, recent evidence has revealed the presence of CSCs in less prevalence tumors arising from the bladder, pancreas, thyroid and even tumors of the oral cavity (Li et al, 2017; Polireddy and Chen, 2016; Hardin et al, 2017; Baillie et al, 2017) These cancer stem cells (CSC) may exhibit differential properties that allow their escape from traditional radiation or chemotherapy treatments and may be responsible for cancer recurrence (Saini and Yang, 2017; Zhang et al, 2018). As more information becomes available regarding the properties and mechanisms of CSC

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