The Cancer Stem Cell Hypothesis: Failures and Pitfalls
暂无分享,去创建一个
Loic Deleyrolle | Muhammad Abd-El-Barr | Hassan Azari | M. Abd-El-Barr | H. Azari | V. Vedam-Mai | Maryam Rahman | Vinata Vedam-Mai | Brent A Reynolds | B. Reynolds | Maryam Rahman | L. Deleyrolle
[1] Rolf Bjerkvig,et al. Opinion: the origin of the cancer stem cell: current controversies and new insights. , 2005, Nature reviews. Cancer.
[2] R. Wallace,et al. Postnatal neurogenesis in the feline cerebellum: a structural-functional investigation. , 1974, Acta neurobiologiae experimentalis.
[3] Max S Wicha,et al. Cancer stem cells: an old idea--a paradigm shift. , 2006, Cancer research.
[4] H. Armah. Malignant Astrocytomas Originate from Neural Stem/Progenitor Cells in a Somatic Tumor Suppressor Mouse Model , 2010 .
[5] S. Kern,et al. The fuzzy math of solid tumor stem cells: a perspective. , 2007, Cancer research.
[6] H. Nakauchi,et al. The ABC transporter Bcrp1/ABCG2 is expressed in a wide variety of stem cells and is a molecular determinant of the side-population phenotype , 2001, Nature Medicine.
[7] Rolf Bjerkvig,et al. The origin of the cancer stem cell: current controversies and new insights , 2005, Nature Reviews Cancer.
[8] D. Benos,et al. CD133 Is a Marker of Bioenergetic Stress in Human Glioma , 2008, PloS one.
[9] T. Papayannopoulou,et al. Chronic myelocytic leukemia: clonal origin in a stem cell common to the granulocyte, erythrocyte, platelet and monocyte/macrophage. , 1977, The American journal of medicine.
[10] S. Weiss,et al. Generation of neurons and astrocytes from isolated cells of the adult mammalian central nervous system. , 1992, Science.
[11] Jian Wang,et al. CD133 negative glioma cells form tumors in nude rats and give rise to CD133 positive cells , 2008, International journal of cancer.
[12] M. Biffoni,et al. Identification and expansion of the tumorigenic lung cancer stem cell population , 2008, Cell Death and Differentiation.
[13] D. Howard,et al. Preferential induction of apoptosis for primary human leukemic stem cells , 2002, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[14] K. Akashi,et al. MOZ-TIF2, but not BCR-ABL, confers properties of leukemic stem cells to committed murine hematopoietic progenitors. , 2004, Cancer cell.
[15] S. Horvath,et al. Neurosphere Formation Is an Independent Predictor of Clinical Outcome in Malignant Glioma , 2009, Stem cells.
[16] S. Wolman. Cytogenetic heterogeneity: its role in tumor evolution. , 1986, Cancer genetics and cytogenetics.
[17] C. Jordan. Cancer stem cells: controversial or just misunderstood? , 2009, Cell stem cell.
[18] S. Gartler,et al. Clonal origin of chronic myelocytic leukemia in man. , 1967, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[19] T. Yokota,et al. Cytokines: coordinators of immune and inflammatory responses. , 1990, Annual review of biochemistry.
[20] Mark W. Dewhirst,et al. Glioma stem cells promote radioresistance by preferential activation of the DNA damage response , 2006, Nature.
[21] Michael F. Clarke,et al. Applying the principles of stem-cell biology to cancer , 2003, Nature Reviews Cancer.
[22] C. Maley,et al. Cancer is a disease of clonal evolution within the body1–3. This has profound clinical implications for neoplastic progression, cancer prevention and cancer therapy. Although the idea of cancer as an evolutionary problem , 2006 .
[23] Michael T Lewis,et al. Faith, heresy and the cancer stem cell hypothesis. , 2008, Future oncology.
[24] Alexander Brawanski,et al. CD133(+) and CD133(-) glioblastoma-derived cancer stem cells show differential growth characteristics and molecular profiles. , 2007, Cancer research.
[25] Kornelia Polyak,et al. Heterogeneity for Stem Cell–Related Markers According to Tumor Subtype and Histologic Stage in Breast Cancer , 2010, Clinical Cancer Research.
[26] O. van Tellingen,et al. Bmi1 controls tumor development in an Ink4a/Arf-independent manner in a mouse model for glioma. , 2007, Cancer cell.
[27] H. Fine,et al. SSEA-1 is an enrichment marker for tumor-initiating cells in human glioblastoma. , 2009, Cell stem cell.
[28] H. Ng,et al. Glioblastoma stem cells resistant to temozolomide-induced autophagy. , 2009, Chinese medical journal.
[29] J. Till,et al. Differentiation in human myeloblastic leukemia studied in cell culture. , 1977, The American journal of pathology.
[30] D. Gilliland,et al. Leukaemia stem cells and the evolution of cancer-stem-cell research , 2005, Nature Reviews Cancer.
[31] T. Golub,et al. Transformation from committed progenitor to leukaemia stem cell initiated by MLL–AF9 , 2006, Nature.
[32] Eran Segal,et al. Stemness, cancer, and cancer stem cells , 2008, Cell cycle.
[33] I. Weissman,et al. Similar MLL-associated leukemias arising from self-renewing stem cells and short-lived myeloid progenitors. , 2003, Genes & development.
[34] A. Vescovi,et al. Brain cancer stem cells: Think twice before going flat. , 2009, Cell stem cell.
[35] M. Goodell,et al. A distinct "side population" of cells with high drug efflux capacity in human tumor cells. , 2004, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[36] Yukio Kondo,et al. TGF-β–FOXO signalling maintains leukaemia-initiating cells in chronic myeloid leukaemia , 2010, Nature.
[37] Yuri Kotliarov,et al. Tumor stem cells derived from glioblastomas cultured in bFGF and EGF more closely mirror the phenotype and genotype of primary tumors than do serum-cultured cell lines. , 2006, Cancer cell.
[38] C. Jordan,et al. Mechanisms controlling pathogenesis and survival of leukemic stem cells , 2004, Oncogene.
[39] Justin C. Grindley,et al. Tumour-initiating cells: challenges and opportunities for anticancer drug discovery , 2009, Nature Reviews Drug Discovery.
[40] T. Tsuruo,et al. Dofequidar fumarate sensitizes cancer stem‐like side population cells to chemotherapeutic drugs by inhibiting ABCG2/BCRP‐mediated drug export , 2009, Cancer science.
[41] J. Hinds,et al. Neurogenesis in the adult rat: electron microscopic analysis of light radioautographs. , 1977, Science.
[42] I. Weissman,et al. Therapeutic implications of cancer stem cells. , 2004, Current opinion in genetics & development.
[43] J. Kershman. THE MEDULLOBLAST AND THE MEDULLOBLASTOMA: A STUDY OF HUMAN EMBRYOS , 1938 .
[44] J. Adamson,et al. Acute nonlymphocytic leukemia: heterogeneity of stem cell origin. , 1981, Blood.
[45] H. Cameron,et al. Differentiation of newly born neurons and glia in the dentate gyrus of the adult rat , 1993, Neuroscience.
[46] S. Morrison,et al. Prospective identification of tumorigenic breast cancer cells , 2003, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[47] A. Hamburger,et al. Primary bioassay of human tumor stem cells. , 1977, Science.
[48] E. Parati,et al. Epidermal and Fibroblast Growth Factors Behave as Mitogenic Regulators for a Single Multipotent Stem Cell-Like Population from the Subventricular Region of the Adult Mouse Forebrain , 1999, The Journal of Neuroscience.
[49] C. P. Leblond,et al. Presence of DNA synthesis and mitosis in the brain of young adult mice. , 1958, Experimental cell research.
[50] I. Weissman,et al. Stem cells, cancer, and cancer stem cells , 2001, Nature.
[51] M. Blagosklonny. Target for cancer therapy: proliferating cells or stem cells , 2006, Leukemia.
[52] Kornelia Polyak,et al. Breast Tumor Heterogeneity: Cancer Stem Cells or Clonal Evolution? , 2007, Cell cycle.
[53] Kornelia Polyak,et al. The cancer stem cell hypothesis: in search of definitions, markers, and relevance , 2008, Laboratory Investigation.
[54] R. Bjerkvig,et al. Cancer initiation and progression: involvement of stem cells and the microenvironment. , 2007, Biochimica et biophysica acta.
[55] E. Lagasse,et al. Cancer stem cells with genetic instability: the best vehicle with the best engine for cancer , 2008, Gene Therapy.
[56] W. A. Bryans. Mitotic activity in the brain of the adult rat , 1959 .
[57] M. Raaijmakers,et al. Breast Cancer Resistance Protein in Drug Resistance of Primitive CD34+38− Cells in Acute Myeloid Leukemia , 2005, Clinical Cancer Research.
[58] D. Metcalf,et al. Stimulation by Leukaemic Sera of Colony Formation in Solid Agar Cultures by Proliferation of Mouse Bone Marrow Cells , 1967, Nature.
[59] A. Strasser,et al. Is tumor growth sustained by rare cancer stem cells or dominant clones? , 2008, Cancer research.
[60] G. Faguet,et al. Evidence that essential thrombocythemia is a clonal disorder with origin in a multipotent stem cell. , 1981, Blood.
[61] B. Druker,et al. Oncogenes and Tumor Suppressors (795 articles) , 2004 .
[62] E. McCulloch,et al. A colony assay for blast cell progenitors in non-B non-T (common) acute lymphoblastic leukemia. , 1981, Blood.
[63] D. V. Von Hoff,et al. Culture of human head and neck cancer stem cells using soft agar. , 1980, Archives of otolaryngology.
[64] M. Caligiuri,et al. A cell initiating human acute myeloid leukaemia after transplantation into SCID mice , 1994, Nature.
[65] F. DiMeco,et al. Origins and clinical implications of the brain tumor stem cell hypothesis , 2009, Journal of Neuro-Oncology.
[66] L. Sachs,et al. The cloning of normal "mast" cells in tissue culture. , 1965, Journal of cellular physiology.
[67] P. Febbo,et al. Identification of CD15 as a marker for tumor-propagating cells in a mouse model of medulloblastoma. , 2009, Cancer cell.
[68] J. McNamara. Cancer Stem Cells , 2007, Methods in Molecular Biology.
[69] G. Broggi,et al. Bone morphogenetic proteins inhibit the tumorigenic potential of human brain tumour-initiating cells , 2006, Nature.
[70] J. Altman. Proliferation and migration of undifferentiated precursor cells in the rat during postnatal gliogenesis. , 1966, Experimental neurology.
[71] J. Dick. Human stem cell assays in immune‐deficient mice , 1996, Current opinion in hematology.
[72] W. Hahn,et al. Roots and stems: stem cells in cancer , 2006, Nature Medicine.
[73] H. Koeffler,et al. Chronic Myelocytic Leukaemia: a Pluripotent Haemopoietic Cell is Involved in the Malignant Clone , 1981, British journal of haematology.
[74] R. Henkelman,et al. Identification of human brain tumour initiating cells , 2004, Nature.
[75] S. Morrison,et al. Heterogeneity in Cancer: Cancer Stem Cells versus Clonal Evolution , 2009, Cell.
[76] Loic Deleyrolle,et al. Enumeration of Neural Stem and Progenitor Cells in the Neural Colony‐Forming Cell Assay , 2008, Stem cells.
[77] R. Gilbertson,et al. Making a tumour's bed: glioblastoma stem cells and the vascular niche , 2007, Nature Reviews Cancer.
[78] D. Metcalf,et al. The growth of mouse bone marrow cells in vitro. , 1966, The Australian journal of experimental biology and medical science.
[79] J. Altman,et al. Autoradiographic and histological evidence of postnatal hippocampal neurogenesis in rats , 1965, The Journal of comparative neurology.
[80] Xiangjiao Meng,et al. Both CD133+ and CD133− subpopulations of A549 and H446 cells contain cancer‐initiating cells , 2009, Cancer science.
[81] F. Miller,et al. The cellular basis of tumor progression. , 1998, International review of cytology.
[82] P. Dalerba,et al. Identification of pancreatic cancer stem cells. , 2006, Cancer research.
[83] L. Ricci-Vitiani,et al. Identification and expansion of human colon-cancer-initiating cells , 2007, Nature.
[84] J. Cohnheim. Ueber Entzündung und Eiterung , 1867, Archiv für pathologische Anatomie und Physiologie und für klinische Medicin.
[85] D. Scadden,et al. Stem cell repopulation efficiency but not pool size is governed by p27kip1 , 2000, Nature Medicine.
[86] M. Loeffler,et al. Stem cells: attributes, cycles, spirals, pitfalls and uncertainties. Lessons for and from the crypt. , 1990, Development.
[87] J. Masters,et al. Curing metastatic cancer: lessons from testicular germ-cell tumours , 2003, Nature Reviews Cancer.
[88] D. Langenau,et al. Zebrafish as a model for cancer self-renewal. , 2009, Zebrafish.
[89] Wallace Rb,et al. Postnatal neurogenesis in the feline cerebellum: a structural-functional investigation. , 1974 .
[90] F. Nottebohm,et al. Neuronal production, migration, and differentiation in a vocal control nucleus of the adult female canary brain. , 1983, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[91] T. Mikkelsen,et al. The induction of autophagy by γ‐radiation contributes to the radioresistance of glioma stem cells , 2009, International journal of cancer.
[92] I. Weissman,et al. Direct isolation of human central nervous system stem cells. , 2000, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[93] M. Araúzo-Bravo,et al. Pluripotent stem cells induced from adult neural stem cells by reprogramming with two factors , 2008, Nature.
[94] I. Radovanovic,et al. Limits of CD133 as a marker of glioma self‐renewing cells , 2009, International journal of cancer.
[95] P. Nowell. The clonal evolution of tumor cell populations. , 1976, Science.
[96] Xiaofeng Yang,et al. Most C6 cells are cancer stem cells: evidence from clonal and population analyses. , 2007, Cancer research.
[97] K. Anderson,et al. Distinct patterns of hematopoietic stem cell involvement in acute lymphoblastic leukemia , 2005, Nature Medicine.
[98] Xin Lu,et al. Cell fusion as a hidden force in tumor progression. , 2009, Cancer research.
[99] François Vaillant,et al. Generation of a functional mammary gland from a single stem cell , 2006, Nature.
[100] U. Rapp,et al. Oncogene-induced plasticity and cancer stem cells , 2008, Cell cycle.
[101] A. Iwama,et al. Enhanced self-renewal capability in hepatic stem/progenitor cells drives cancer initiation. , 2007, Gastroenterology.
[102] L. Ricci-Vitiani,et al. Cancer Stem Cell Analysis and Clinical Outcome in Patients with Glioblastoma Multiforme , 2008, Clinical Cancer Research.
[103] J. Till,et al. Evidence for a relationship between mouse hemopoietic stem cells and cells forming colonies in culture. , 1968, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[104] C. Heeschen,et al. Distinct populations of cancer stem cells determine tumor growth and metastatic activity in human pancreatic cancer. , 2007, Cell stem cell.
[105] A. Hamilton. The division of differentiated cells in the central nervous system of the white rat , 1901 .
[106] S. Gartler,et al. Glucose-6-Phosphate Dehydrogenase Mosaicism: Utilization as a Cell Marker in the Study of Leiomyomas , 1965, Science.
[107] Takahiro Kunisada,et al. Characterization of CD133+ hepatocellular carcinoma cells as cancer stem/progenitor cells. , 2006, Biochemical and biophysical research communications.
[108] D. Steindler,et al. Human cortical glial tumors contain neural stem‐like cells expressing astroglial and neuronal markers in vitro , 2002, Glia.
[109] J. Dick,et al. A human colon cancer cell capable of initiating tumour growth in immunodeficient mice , 2007, Nature.
[110] Aleksandar Dakic,et al. Tumor Growth Need Not Be Driven by Rare Cancer Stem Cells , 2007, Science.
[111] Angelo L. Vescovi,et al. Brain tumour stem cells , 2006, Nature Reviews Cancer.
[112] Ugo Orfanelli,et al. Isolation and Characterization of Tumorigenic, Stem-like Neural Precursors from Human Glioblastoma , 2004, Cancer Research.
[113] Mark Bernstein,et al. Glioma stem cell lines expanded in adherent culture have tumor-specific phenotypes and are suitable for chemical and genetic screens. , 2009, Cell stem cell.
[114] M. Clarke,et al. Long-term haematopoietic reconstitution by Trp53-/-p16Ink4a-/-p19Arf-/- multipotent progenitors , 2008, Nature.
[115] Daniel H. Geschwind,et al. Cancerous stem cells can arise from pediatric brain tumors , 2003, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[116] Mark Shackleton,et al. Efficient tumour formation by single human melanoma cells , 2008 .
[117] R. Kerbel,et al. Glioma tumor stem-like cells promote tumor angiogenesis and vasculogenesis via vascular endothelial growth factor and stromal-derived factor 1. , 2009, Cancer research.
[118] Laurie E Ailles,et al. Granulocyte-macrophage progenitors as candidate leukemic stem cells in blast-crisis CML. , 2004, The New England journal of medicine.
[119] F. Nottebohm,et al. Neurons generated in the adult brain are recruited into functional circuits. , 1984, Science.
[120] J. Dick,et al. Human acute myeloid leukemia is organized as a hierarchy that originates from a primitive hematopoietic cell , 1997, Nature Medicine.
[121] G. Stassi,et al. Cancer stem cells – old concepts, new insights , 2008, Cell Death and Differentiation.
[122] Hannah H. Chang,et al. Non-genetic heterogeneity — a mutation-independent driving force for the somatic evolution of tumours , 2009, Nature Reviews Genetics.
[123] H. Kiyonari,et al. Glioblastoma Formation from Cell Population Depleted of Prominin1-Expressing Cells , 2009, PloS one.
[124] S. McBride. Natural selection's challenge to the cancer stem cell hypothesis. , 2008, Medical hypotheses.
[125] Brent A Reynolds,et al. Neural stem cells and neurospheres—re-evaluating the relationship , 2005, Nature Methods.
[126] J. Dick,et al. Cancer stem cells: lessons from leukemia. , 2005, Trends in cell biology.
[127] K. Miyazono,et al. Autocrine TGF-beta signaling maintains tumorigenicity of glioma-initiating cells through Sry-related HMG-box factors. , 2009, Cell stem cell.
[128] J. Melo,et al. Primitive, Quiescent and Difficult to Kill: The Role of Non-Proliferating Stem Cells in Chronic Myeloid Leukemia , 2006, Cell cycle.
[129] R. Galli,et al. Resilience to transformation and inherent genetic and functional stability of adult neural stem cells ex vivo. , 2007, Cancer Research.
[130] D. V. Von Hoff,et al. In vitro stem cell assay in head and neck squamous carcinoma. , 1980, American journal of surgery.
[131] R. Wells,et al. First among equals: The cancer cell hierarchy , 2006, Leukemia & lymphoma.
[132] Wenjun Guo,et al. The Epithelial-Mesenchymal Transition Generates Cells with Properties of Stem Cells , 2008, Cell.
[133] W. R. Bruce,et al. A Quantitative Assay for the Number of Murine Lymphoma Cells capable of Proliferation in vivo , 1963, Nature.
[134] J. Visvader,et al. Cancer stem cells in solid tumours: accumulating evidence and unresolved questions , 2008, Nature Reviews Cancer.
[135] E. McCulloch,et al. Self-renewal capacity of leukemic blast progenitor cells. , 1981, Cancer research.
[136] Yuri Kotliarov,et al. Epigenetic-mediated dysfunction of the bone morphogenetic protein pathway inhibits differentiation of glioblastoma-initiating cells. , 2008, Cancer cell.
[137] N. Maitland,et al. Prospective identification of tumorigenic prostate cancer stem cells. , 2005, Cancer research.
[138] Y. Guan,et al. Detection, isolation, and stimulation of quiescent primitive leukemic progenitor cells from patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML). , 2003, Blood.
[139] Richard J. Jones,et al. Cancer stem cells: are we missing the target? , 2004, Journal of the National Cancer Institute.
[140] Brent A. Reynolds,et al. Multipotent CNS Stem Cells Are Present in the Adult Mammalian Spinal Cord and Ventricular Neuroaxis , 1996, The Journal of Neuroscience.
[141] G. Camussi,et al. CD133+ renal progenitor cells contribute to tumor angiogenesis. , 2006, The American journal of pathology.
[142] J. Till,et al. A direct measurement of the radiation sensitivity of normal mouse bone marrow cells. , 1961, Radiation research.
[143] G. Parkin,et al. Long-term tripotent differentiation capacity of human neural stem (NS) cells in adherent culture , 2008, Molecular and Cellular Neuroscience.
[144] H. Okano,et al. Identification of tumor-initiating cells in a highly aggressive brain tumor using promoter activity of nucleostemin , 2009, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
[145] Susan O'Brien,et al. Survival benefit with imatinib mesylate therapy in patients with accelerated‐phase chronic myelogenous leukemia—Comparison with historic experience , 2005, Cancer.
[146] R. Beroukhim,et al. Molecular definition of breast tumor heterogeneity. , 2007, Cancer cell.
[147] H. Beug. Breast Cancer Stem Cells: Eradication by Differentiation Therapy? , 2009, Cell.
[148] D. Gary Gilliland,et al. Cancer biology: Summing up cancer stem cells , 2005, Nature.
[149] E. McCulloch,et al. Mouse myeloma tumor stem cells: a primary cell culture assay. , 1971, Journal of the National Cancer Institute.
[150] Qiulian Wu,et al. Stem cell-like glioma cells promote tumor angiogenesis through vascular endothelial growth factor. , 2006, Cancer research.
[151] M. Blagosklonny. Why Therapeutic Response May Not Prolong the Life of a Cancer Patient: Selection for Oncogenic Resistance , 2005, Cell cycle.
[152] G. Nicolson,et al. Diversification and progression of malignant tumors , 1987, BioEssays : news and reviews in molecular, cellular and developmental biology.
[153] J. Villano,et al. Temozolomide in malignant gliomas: current use and future targets , 2009, Cancer Chemotherapy and Pharmacology.
[154] A. Levin,et al. Host resistance to cancer. Clinical experiments by homotransplants, autotransplants and admixture of autologous leucocytes. , 1965, Annals of surgery.
[155] Michael Dean,et al. Tumour stem cells and drug resistance , 2005, Nature Reviews Cancer.