Grimshaw Matthew J, Cooper Lucienne, Papazisis Konstantinos, Coleman Julia A, Bohnenkamp Hermann R, Chiapero-Stanke Laura, Taylor-Papadimitriou Joyce, Burchell Joy M
Breast Cancer Biology Group, King's College London School of Medicine, Guy's Hospital Campus, Great Maze Pond, London, UK.
Breast Cancer Res. 2008;10(3):R52. doi: 10.1186/bcr2106. Epub 2008 Jun 9.
The identification of potential breast cancer stem cells is of importance as the characteristics of stem cells suggest that they are resistant to conventional forms of therapy. Several techniques have been proposed to isolate or enrich for tumorigenic breast cancer stem cells, including (a) culture of cells in non-adherent non-differentiating conditions to form mammospheres and (b) sorting of the cells by their surface phenotype (expression of CD24 and CD44).
We have cultured metastatic cells found in pleural effusions from breast cancer patients in non-adherent conditions without serum to form mammospheres. Dissociated cells from these mammospheres were used to determine the tumorigenicity of these cultures. Expression of CD24 and CD44 on uncultured cells and mammospheres derived from the pleural effusions was documented.
We found that the majority (20/27) of the pleural effusions tested contained cells capable of forming mammospheres of varying sizes that could be passaged. After dissociation and plating with serum onto adherent dishes, the cells can differentiate, as determined by the increased expression of cytokeratins and MUC1. Analysis of surface expression of CD24 and CD44 on uncultured cells from 21 of the samples showed that the cells from some samples separated into two populations, but some did not. The proportion of cells that could be considered CD44+/CD24low/- was highly variable and did not appear to correlate with the ability to form the larger mammospheres. Of eight pleural effusion mammospheres tested in severe combined immunodeficiency disease (SCID) mice, four were found to induce tumours when only 5,000 or fewer cells were injected, whereas the same number of uncultured cells did not form tumours. The ability to induce tumours appeared to correlate with the ability to produce the larger mammospheres. Uncultured cells from a highly tumorigenic sample (PE14) were uniformly negative for surface expression of both CD24 and CD44.
This paper shows, for the first time, that mammosphere culture of pleural effusions enriches for cells capable of inducing tumours in SCID mice. The data suggest that mammosphere culture of these metastatic cells could provide a highly appropriate model for studying the sensitivity of the tumorigenic 'stem' cells to therapeutic agents and for further characterisation of the tumour-inducing subpopulation of breast cancer cells.
鉴定潜在的乳腺癌干细胞至关重要,因为干细胞的特性表明它们对传统治疗形式具有抗性。已经提出了几种技术来分离或富集致瘤性乳腺癌干细胞,包括(a)在非贴壁非分化条件下培养细胞以形成乳腺球,以及(b)根据细胞表面表型(CD24和CD44的表达)对细胞进行分选。
我们在无血清的非贴壁条件下培养了乳腺癌患者胸腔积液中发现的转移细胞,以形成乳腺球。来自这些乳腺球的解离细胞用于确定这些培养物的致瘤性。记录了未培养细胞以及源自胸腔积液的乳腺球上CD24和CD44的表达情况。
我们发现,所测试的大多数(20/27)胸腔积液含有能够形成大小各异且可传代的乳腺球的细胞。在用血清解离并接种到贴壁培养皿上后,细胞能够分化,这可通过细胞角蛋白和MUC1表达的增加来确定。对21个样本的未培养细胞进行CD24和CD44表面表达分析表明,一些样本中的细胞可分为两个群体,但有些则不能。可被视为CD44+/CD24low/-的细胞比例变化很大,且似乎与形成较大乳腺球的能力无关。在严重联合免疫缺陷病(SCID)小鼠中测试的8个胸腔积液乳腺球中,当仅注射5000个或更少细胞时,有4个被发现可诱导肿瘤,而相同数量的未培养细胞则不能形成肿瘤。诱导肿瘤的能力似乎与产生较大乳腺球的能力相关。来自高致瘤性样本(PE14)的未培养细胞在CD24和CD44的表面表达上均呈均匀阴性。
本文首次表明,胸腔积液的乳腺球培养可富集能够在SCID小鼠中诱导肿瘤的细胞。数据表明,这些转移细胞的乳腺球培养可为研究致瘤“干细胞”对治疗药物的敏感性以及进一步表征乳腺癌细胞的肿瘤诱导亚群提供一个非常合适的模型。