JoVE Logo

Accedi

20.12 : Cancer Stem Cells and Tumor Maintenance

Early diagnosis and treatment can often cure cancer. However, even with treatment, residual cells called cancer stem cells (CSC) might remain, often causing tumor recurrence. These cancer stem cells possess the potential for self-renewal and multi-lineage differentiation and are often responsible for the therapeutic resistance displayed in most cancers.

Cancer stem cells are thought to originate from tissue-specific normal stem cells or progenitor cells. The normal stem cells usually reside in a quiescent state until the receipt of a stimulatory signal, which triggers proliferation or differentiation. Genetic alterations in these normal stem cells can reprogram their cellular pathways, turning them into cancer stem cells. Such cells divide abnormally and contribute to tumor progression while maintaining their stem cell properties.

Cancer stem cells can give rise to more stem cells or highly differentiated cancer cells with equal probability. While the daughter cancer stem cells can seed new tumors or metastasize to new sites, the non-stem cancer cells terminally differentiate and are eventually discarded and replaced after a few rounds of division. However, in most tumors, the differentiated cells form a significant mass of the cancer-cell population.

Cancer stem cells often demonstrate endurance to conventional cancer therapies. Cancer stem cells' ability to increase drug efflux rate, alter drug metabolism, resist DNA damage, and enhance DNA repair to their advantage, is often attributed to their chemo-resistance. Epigenetic modifications and supplementary survival signals from tumor microenvironments also contribute to the drug resistance exhibited by these cancer stem cells.

Hence, the presence of cancer stem cells is understood to be one of the primary reasons for tumor maintenance, cancer-treatment failure, relapse, and even metastasis.

Tags

Cancer Stem CellsTumor MaintenanceSelf renewalMulti lineage DifferentiationTherapeutic ResistanceNormal Stem CellsProgenitor CellsQuiescent StateGenetic AlterationsCancer ProgressionTumor RecurrenceMetastasisChemo resistanceEpigenetic ModificationsTumor Microenvironment

Dal capitolo 20:

article

Now Playing

20.12 : Cancer Stem Cells and Tumor Maintenance

Cancer

4.7K Visualizzazioni

article

20.1 : Cosa sono i tumori?

Cancer

10.5K Visualizzazioni

article

20.2 : I tumori hanno origine da mutazioni somatiche in una singola cellula

Cancer

11.5K Visualizzazioni

article

20.3 : Progressione del tumore

Cancer

6.2K Visualizzazioni

article

20.4 : Meccanismi adattativi nelle cellule tumorali

Cancer

5.7K Visualizzazioni

article

20.5 : Il microambiente tumorale

Cancer

6.5K Visualizzazioni

article

20.6 : Metastasi

Cancer

5.5K Visualizzazioni

article

20.7 : Carcinogenesi I: proto-oncogeni

Cancer

8.7K Visualizzazioni

article

20.8 : Meccanismi dei tumori indotti da retrovirus

Cancer

5.0K Visualizzazioni

article

20.9 : Il gene Ras

Cancer

6.1K Visualizzazioni

article

20.10 : Perdita di funzione dei geni oncosoppressori

Cancer

4.7K Visualizzazioni

article

20.11 : Via di segnalazione di mTOR e progressione del tumore

Cancer

3.7K Visualizzazioni

article

20.13 : Modelli murini per lo studio del tumore

Cancer

5.5K Visualizzazioni

article

20.14 : Prevenzione del cancro

Cancer

6.0K Visualizzazioni

article

20.15 : Terapie tumorali

Cancer

7.5K Visualizzazioni

See More

JoVE Logo

Riservatezza

Condizioni di utilizzo

Politiche

Ricerca

Didattica

CHI SIAMO

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. Tutti i diritti riservati