4.8 Article

Slow-Cycling Cancer Stem Cells Regulate Progression and Chemoresistance in Colon Cancer

Journal

CANCER RESEARCH
Volume 80, Issue 20, Pages 4451-4464

Publisher

AMER ASSOC CANCER RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-20-0378

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Cancer Center Research and Development Fund [29-A-2, 31-A-3, 31-A-4, 31-A-8]
  2. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science [JP18H02679, 18K07283]
  3. MEXT [JP17H06419]
  4. AMED [JP19cm0106563h0001, 19ak0101043h0105, 19cm0106137h0002]
  5. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [18K07283] Funding Source: KAKEN

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Cancer chemoresistance is often attributed to the presence of cancer stem cell (CSC)-like cells, but whether they are homogeneously chemoresistant remains unclear. We previously showed that in colon tumors, a subpopulation of LGR5(+) CSC-like cells driven by TCF1 (TCF7), a Wnt-responsive transcription factor, were responsible for tumorigenicity. Here we demonstrate that the tumorigenic subpopulation of mouse LGR5(+) cells exists in a slow-cycling state and identify a unique 22-gene signature that characterizes these slow-cycling CSC. Seven of the signature genes are specifically expressed in slow-cycling LGR5(+) cells from xenografted human colon tumors and are upregulated in colon cancer clinical specimens. Among these seven, four genes (APCDD1, NOTUM, PROX1, and SP5) are known to be direct Wnt target genes, and PROX1 was expressed in the invasive fronts of colon tumors. PROX1 was activated by TCF1 to induce CDKN1C and maintain a slow-cycling state in colon cancer organoids. Strikingly, PROX1 was required for recurrent growth after chemotherapeutic treatment, suggesting that inhibition of slow-cycling CSC by targeting the TCF1-PROX1-CDKN1C pathway is an effective strategy to combat refractory colon cancer in combination with conventional chemotherapy. Significance: These findings illustrate the importance of a slow-cycling CSC subpopulation in colon cancer development and chemoresistance, with potential implications for the identified slow-cycling CSC signatures and the TCF1-PROX1-CDKN1C pathway as therapeutic targets.

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