Catching moving targets: Cancer stem cell hierarchies, therapy-resistance & considerations for clinical intervention

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Gasch, C. and Ffrench, B. and O'Leary, J.J. and Gallagher, M.F., Catching moving targets: Cancer stem cell hierarchies, therapy-resistance & considerations for clinical intervention, Molecular Cancer, 16, 1, 2017, 43

Abstract

It is widely believed that targeting the tumour-initiating cancer stem cell (CSC) component of malignancy has great therapeutic potential, particularly in therapy-resistant disease. However, despite concerted efforts, CSC-targeting strategies have not been efficiently translated to the clinic. This is partly due to our incomplete understanding of the mechanisms underlying CSC therapy-resistance. In particular, the relationship between therapy-resistance and the organisation of CSCs as Stem-Progenitor-Differentiated cell hierarchies has not been widely studied. In this review we argue that modern clinical strategies should appreciate that the CSC hierarchy is a dynamic target that contains sensitive and resistant components and expresses a collection of therapy-resisting mechanisms. We propose that the CSC hierarchy at primary presentation changes in response to clinical intervention, resulting in a recurrent malignancy that should be targeted differently. As such, addressing the hierarchical organisation of CSCs into our bench-side theory should expedite translation of CSC-targeting to bed-side practice. In conclusion, we discuss strategies through which we can catch these moving clinical targets to specifically compromise therapy-resistant disease.

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Sponsor: Science Foundation Ireland (SFI)

Type of material: Journal Article