| Discovery
could explain current treatment failures and lead to more effective
therapies for many cancers
added 02/24/03
ANN ARBOR, Mich. - Of all the neoplastic
cells in human breast cancers, only a small minority - perhaps
as few as one in 100 - appear to be capable of forming new
malignant tumors, according to just-published research by
scientists in the University of Michigan Comprehensive Cancer
Center. The discovery could help researchers zero in on the
most dangerous cancer cells to develop new, more effective
treatments.
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Cancer
stem cells isolated from human breast cancers by U-M
scientists.
Photo credit: Courtesy of Proceedings
of the National Academy of Sciences.
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"These tumor-inducing cells have many of the properties
of stem cells," says Michael
Clarke, M.D., a U-M professor of internal medicine, who
directed the study. "They make copies of themselves -
a process called self-renewal - and produce all the other
kinds of cells in the original tumor."
Although similar cells have been identified in human leukemia,
these are the first to be found in solid tumors, Clarke adds.
The cells were isolated from primary or metastatic breast
cancers removed from nine women treated for cancer at the
U-M's Cancer Center.
The discovery - reported this week in the online early edition
of the Proceedings
of the National Academy of Sciences
- also may explain why current treatments for metastatic breast
cancer often fail, says Max
S. Wicha, M.D., an oncologist and director of the U-M
Comprehensive Cancer Center.
"The goal of all our existing therapies has been to
kill as many cells within the tumor as possible," Wicha
says. "This study suggests that the current model may
not be getting us anywhere, because we have been targeting
the wrong cells with the wrong treatments. Instead, we need
to develop drugs targeted at the tumor's stem cells. If we
are to have any real cures in advanced breast cancer, it will
be absolutely necessary to eliminate these cells.
"What this means for women with cancer is that, for
the first time, we can define what we believe are the important
cells - the cells which determine whether the cancer will
come back or be cured," Wicha adds. "Before this,
we didn't even know there were such cells."
All cancer cells have a unique pattern of proteins, similar
to a fingerprint, on their surface membranes, explains Muhammad
Al-Hajj, Ph.D., a U-M post-doctoral fellow and first author
of the PNAS paper. " We used specific antibodies and
flow cytometry technology to segregate the phenotypically
heterogenous cancer cells within a tumor into isolated populations
based on their surface protein markers," Al-Hajj says.
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Cells from human breast cancers which have lost the
ability to spread and form tumors.
Photo credit: Muhammad Al-Hajj,
University of Michigan. Courtesy of Proceedings of the
National Academy of Sciences. |
These isolated cell populations were then individually injected
into immune-deficient mice and the mice were examined for
tumor growth every week for up to six months.
Al-Hajj found a small group of cells, with a
phenotype common to all but one of the human tumors in the
study, could form new cancers in mice. These cells all expressed
a protein marker called CD44, in addition to having either
very low levels or no levels of a marker called CD24.
"As few as 100 to 200 of these tumor-inducing
cells, isolated from eight of nine tumors in the study, easily
formed tumors in mice, while tens of thousands of the other
cancer cells from the original tumor failed to do so,"
Clarke says.
The fact that tumor-inducing stem cells from
eight of nine women showed a common surface marker pattern
is significant, Wicha explains. "Even though it's only
nine patients, it shows that the markers identifying these
stem cells were expressed in the majority of breast cancer
patients in the study. This may not be the only expression
pattern on every patient's stem cells, but it demonstrates
the validity of the cancer stem cell model."
To test the stem cell's ability to regenerate
the original tumor, U-M scientists repeated the experiment
up to four times. First, 200 cells with the unique two-marker
surface pattern were isolated from the original human tumor.
When these cells produced a breast tumor in a mouse, Al-Hajj
removed the mouse tumor and used flow cytometry to isolate
200 stem cells from it. These cells were then injected into
another mouse to produce another tumor. Once again, the tumor
was harvested, stem cells were separated, and injected into
another mouse. Each procedure is called a passage.
"Tumor cells with this particular surface
marker pattern produced a new tumor in the next generation
of mouse every time," Clarke explains. "When we
examined the tumors after each passage, we found their cell
diversity to be the same as the original tumor."
Given that tumor-inducing cells now have been
identified in breast and blood cancers, Wicha and Clarke believe
it is likely that similar cells drive the development of other
types of cancer, as well. The U-M Comprehensive Cancer Center
is establishing a new research program to identify stem cells
in other cancers and develop new therapies to destroy them.
"What we are working on now is finding
out what makes these tumor stem cells different from the other
cells in a tumor," Wicha says. "Now that we can
actually identify them, we can start developing treatments
to specifically target and hopefully eliminate them."
"This is not a cure for cancer," Clarke
emphasizes. "But it is a very promising lead, which will
focus our efforts to try to find a cure for cancer."
In addition to Al-Hajj, Wicha and Clarke, Sean
J. Morrison, Ph.D., a Howard Hughes Medical Institute assistant
investigator and U-M assistant professor of internal medicine,
is a collaborator in the research study.
The U-M study was funded by the National
Cancer Institute. The U-M has applied for a patent on
the identity and function of tumor stem cells.
Special notes on this release:
Though promising, this research is still in
the animal testing stage. Additional research
will be needed before this research progresses to the point
where it could benefit breast cancer patients.
For more information on breast cancer diagnosis
and treatment at the U-M Comprehensive Cancer Center, call
the Cancer AnswerLine at 1-800-865-1125 or visit them online.
Written by Sally Pobojewski
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