CD10 /ALDH cells are the sole cisplatin-resistant component of a novel ovarian cancer stem cell hierarchy

Brendan Ffrench, Claudia Gasch, Karsten Hokamp, Cathy Spillane, Gordon Blackshields, Thamir Mahmoud Mahgoub, Mark Bates, Louise Kehoe, Aoibhinn Mooney, Ronan Doyle, Brendan Doyle, Dearbhaile O’donnell, Noreen Gleeson, Bryan T. Hennessy, Britta Stordal, Ciaran O’riain, Helen Lambkin, Sharon O’toole, John J. O’leary, Michael F. Gallagher

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    It is long established that tumour-initiating cancer stem cells (CSCs) possess chemoresistant properties. However, little is known of the mechanisms involved, particularly with respect to the organisation of CSCs as stem-progenitor-differentiated cell hierarchies. Here we aimed to elucidate the relationship between CSC hierarchies and chemoresistance in an ovarian cancer model. Using a single cell-based approach to CSC discovery and validation, we report a novel, four-component CSC hierarchy based around the markers cluster of differentiation 10 (CD10) and aldehyde dehydrogenase (ALDH). In a change to our understanding of CSC biology, resistance to chemotherapy drug cisplatin was found to be the sole property of CD10/ALDH CSCs, while all four CSC types were sensitive to chemotherapy drug paclitaxel. Cisplatin treatment quickly altered the hierarchy, resulting in a three-component hierarchy dominated by the cisplatin-resistant CD10/ALDH CSC. This organisation was found to be hard-wired in a long-term cisplatin-adapted model, where again CD10/ALDH CSCs were the sole cisplatin-resistant component, and all CSC types remained paclitaxel-sensitive. Molecular analysis indicated that cisplatin resistance is associated with inherent-and adaptive-specific drug efflux and DNA-damage repair mechanisms. Clinically, low CD10 expression was consistent with a specific set of ovarian cancer patient samples. Collectively, these data advance our understanding of the relationship between CSC hierarchies and chemoresistance, which was shown to be CSC-and drug-type specific, and facilitated by specific and synergistic inherent and adaptive mechanisms. Furthermore, our data indicate that primary stage targeting of CD10/ALDH CSCs in specific ovarian cancer patients in future may facilitate targeting of recurrent disease, before it ever develops.

    Original languageEnglish
    Article numbere3128
    JournalCell Death and Disease
    Volume8
    Issue number10
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - Oct 2017

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