The P2X7 Receptor in the Maintenance of Cancer Stem Cells, Chemoresistance and Metastasis.
Vanessa Fernandes Arnaud-SampaioIzadora Lorrany Alves RabeloHenning UlrichClaudiana LameuPublished in: Stem cell reviews and reports (2021)
Metastasis is the worst prognosis predictor in the clinical course of cancer development. Features of metastatic cancer cells include migratory ability, low degree of differentiation, self-renewal and proliferation potentials, as well as resistance to therapies. Metastatic cells do not present all of the necessary characteristics at once. Indeed, they have a unique phenotypic plasticity, allowing the acquisition of features that make them successful in all steps of metastasis. Cancer stem cells (CSC), the most undifferentiated cells in the tumor mass, display highest metastatic potential and resistance to radio- and chemotherapy. Growing tumors exhibit marked upregulation of P2X7 receptor expression and secrete ATP. Since the P2X7 receptor plays an important role in the maintenance of undifferentiated state of pluripotent cells, its importance on cell fate regulation in the tumor mass is suggested. Considering the extensive crosstalk between CSCs, epithelial-mesenchymal transition, drug resistance and metastasis, current knowledge implicating P2X7 receptor function in these phenomena and new avenues for therapeutic strategies to control metastasis are reviewed.
Keyphrases
- cancer stem cells
- induced apoptosis
- cell cycle arrest
- squamous cell carcinoma
- epithelial mesenchymal transition
- small cell lung cancer
- signaling pathway
- healthcare
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- cell death
- cell proliferation
- oxidative stress
- papillary thyroid
- poor prognosis
- pi k akt
- young adults
- transforming growth factor