Urothelial Cancer Stem Cell Heterogeneity.

COX-2 DNMT-1 Epigenetic plasticity Epithelial-mesenchymal transition Intrinsic subtypes Lineage-depletion Lineage-tracing Muscle-invasive bladder cancer Non-muscle-invasive bladder cancer SOX-2 STAT-3 Sonic hedgehog Stemness signaling pathway Urothelial carcinoma Urothelial carcinoma heterogeneity Urothelial carcinoma sexual dimorphism Urothelial carcinoma stem cells Urothelial regenerative response Urothelial stem cells Urothelium Wnt/β-catenin pathway YAP-1

Journal

Advances in experimental medicine and biology
ISSN: 0065-2598
Titre abrégé: Adv Exp Med Biol
Pays: United States
ID NLM: 0121103

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
2019
Historique:
entrez: 29 5 2019
pubmed: 28 5 2019
medline: 14 8 2019
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

Urothelial carcinoma is a tumor type featuring pronounced intertumoral heterogeneity and a high mutational and epigenetic load. The two major histopathological urothelial carcinoma types - the non-muscle-invasive and muscle-invasive urothelial carcinoma - markedly differ in terms of their respective typical mutational profiles and also by their probable cells of origin, that is, a urothelial basal cell for muscle-invasive carcinomas and a urothelial intermediate cell for at least a large part of non-muscle-invasive carcinomas. Both non-muscle-invasive and muscle-invasive urothelial carcinomas can be further classified into discrete intrinsic subtypes based on their typical transcriptomic profiles. Urothelial carcinogenesis shows a number of parallels to a urothelial regenerative response. Both of these processes seem to be dominated by specific stem cell populations. In the last years, the nature and location of urothelial stem cell(s) have been subject to many controversies, which now seem to be settled down, favoring the existence of a largely single urothelial stem cell type located among basal cells. Basal cell markers have also been amply used to identify urothelial carcinoma stem cells, especially in muscle-invasive disease, but they proved useful even in some non-muscle-invasive tumors. Analyses on molecular nature of urothelial carcinoma stem cells performed till now point to their great heterogeneity, both during the tumor development and upon intertumoral comparison, sexual dimorphism providing a special example of the latter. Moreover, urothelial cancer stem cells are endowed with intrinsic plasticity, whereby they can modulate their stemness in relation to other tumor-related traits, especially motility and invasiveness. Such transitional modulations suggest underlying epigenetic mechanisms and, even within this context, inter- and intratumoral heterogeneity becomes apparent. Multiple molecular aspects of urothelial cancer stem cell biology markedly influence therapeutic response, implying their knowledge as a prerequisite to improved therapies of this disease. At the same time, the notion of urothelial cancer stem cell heterogeneity implies that this therapeutic benefit would be most probably and most efficiently achieved within the context of individualized antitumor therapy.

Identifiants

pubmed: 31134499
doi: 10.1007/978-3-030-14366-4_8
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article Review

Langues

eng

Pagination

127-151

Auteurs

Michaela Kripnerova (M)

Charles University, Faculty of Medicine in Pilsen, Institute of Biology, Pilsen, Czech Republic.

Hamendra Singh Parmar (HS)

Charles University, Faculty of Medicine in Pilsen, Institute of Biology, Pilsen, Czech Republic.
School of Biotechnology, Devi Ahilya University, Indore, MP, India.

Martin Pesta (M)

Charles University, Faculty of Medicine in Pilsen, Institute of Biology, Pilsen, Czech Republic.

Michaela Kohoutova (M)

Charles University, Faculty of Medicine in Pilsen, Institute of Physiology, Plzen, Czech Republic.

Jitka Kuncova (J)

Charles University, Faculty of Medicine in Pilsen, Institute of Physiology, Plzen, Czech Republic.

Karel Drbal (K)

Charles University, Faculty of Science, Department of Cell Biology, Prague, Czech Republic.

Marie Rajtmajerova (M)

Charles University, Faculty of Science, Department of Cell Biology, Prague, Czech Republic.

Jiri Hatina (J)

Charles University, Faculty of Medicine in Pilsen, Institute of Biology, Pilsen, Czech Republic. jiri.hatina@lfp.cuni.cz.

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Classifications MeSH