Publication:
Ionizing Radiation Induces Stemness in Cancer Cells

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2012

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Public Library of Science
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Ghisolfi, Laura, Andrew C. Keates, Xingwang Hu, Dong-ki Lee, and Chiang J. Li. 2012. Ionizing radiation induces stemness in cancer cells. PLoS ONE 7(8): e43628.

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Abstract

The cancer stem cell (CSC) model posits the presence of a small number of CSCs in the heterogeneous cancer cell population that are ultimately responsible for tumor initiation, as well as cancer recurrence and metastasis. CSCs have been isolated from a variety of human cancers and are able to generate a hierarchical and heterogeneous cancer cell population. CSCs are also resistant to conventional chemo- and radio-therapies. Here we report that ionizing radiation can induce stem cell-like properties in heterogeneous cancer cells. Exposure of non-stem cancer cells to ionizing radiation enhanced spherogenesis, and this was accompanied by upregulation of the pluripotency genes Sox2 and Oct3/4. Knockdown of Sox2 or Oct3/4 inhibited radiation–induced spherogenesis and increased cellular sensitivity to radiation. These data demonstrate that ionizing radiation can activate stemness pathways in heterogeneous cancer cells, resulting in the enrichment of a CSC subpopulation with higher resistance to radiotherapy.

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Biology, Developmental Biology, Stem Cells, Molecular Cell Biology, Cellular Types, Medicine, Oncology, Cancer Treatment, Radiation Therapy, Cancers and Neoplasms, Gastrointestinal Tumors, Hepatocellular Carcinoma, Basic Cancer Research, Radiotherapy

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