Interactive Health Communication for longer, better lives.

More on cancer stem cells

This post was also authored by Carole on the mma list-

"Here is a new research article that strongly supports the need to develop agents to target cancer stem cells in addition to targeting the differentiated cancer cells (cells that have moved beyond the cancer stem cell phase).  Belief in the existence of cancer stem cells has moved forward slowly in the greater medical community but there seems to be more widespread belief in their existence now."

Carole

Information provided under fair use guidelines:

Cancer Stem Cells: An Old IdeaËœA Paradigm Shift
Max S. Wicha, Suling Liu and Gabriela Dontu
University of Michigan Comprehensive Cancer Center, Ann Arbor, Michigan

Although the concept that cancers arise from "stem cells" or "germ cells" was first proposed about 150 years ago, it is only recently that advances in stem cell biology have given new impetus to the "cancer stem cell hypothesis."

Two important related concepts of this hypothesis are that (a) tumors originate in either tissue stem cells or their immediate progeny through dysregulation of the normally tightly regulated process of self-renewal. As a result of this, (b) tumors contain a cellular subcomponent that retains key stem cell properties. These properties include self-renewal, which drives tumorigenesis, and differentiation albeit aberrant that contributes to cellular heterogeneity.

Recent experimental evidence in a variety of tumors has lent strong support to the cancer stem cell hypothesis that represents a paradigm shift in our understanding of carcinogenesis and tumor cell biology. This hypothesis has fundamental implications for cancer risk assessment, early detection, prognostication, and prevention.

Furthermore, the current development of cancer therapeutics based on tumor regression may have produced agents that kill differentiated tumor cells while sparing the rare cancer stem cell population.

The development of more effective cancer therapies may thus require targeting this important cell population. (Cancer Res 2006; 66(4): 1883-90)

--

Post new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.

More information about formatting options

CAPTCHA
Please type in these five (5) letters or numbers to verify you aren't a SPAM Bot!
Image CAPTCHA
Copy the characters (respecting upper/lower case) from the image.