Rapid reprogramming of tumour cells into cancer stem cells on double-network hydrogels.
Jun SuzukaMasumi TsudaLei WangShinji KohsakaKarin KishidaShingo SembaHirokazu SuginoSachiyo AburataniMartin FrauenlobTakayuki KurokawaShinya KojimaToshihide UenoYoshihiro OhmiyaHiroyuki ManoKazunori YasudaJian Ping GongShinya TanakaPublished in: Nature biomedical engineering (2021)
Cancer recurrence can arise owing to rare circulating cancer stem cells (CSCs) that are resistant to chemotherapies and radiotherapies. Here, we show that a double-network hydrogel can rapidly reprogramme differentiated cancer cells into CSCs. Spheroids expressing elevated levels of the stemness genes Sox2, Oct3/4 and Nanog formed within 24 h of seeding the gel with cells from any of six human cancer cell lines or with brain cancer cells resected from patients with glioblastoma. Human brain cancer cells cultured on the double-network hydrogel and intracranially injected in immunodeficient mice led to higher tumorigenicity than brain cancer cells cultured on single-network gels. We also show that the double-network gel induced the phosphorylation of tyrosine kinases, that gel-induced CSCs from primary brain cancer cells were eradicated by an inhibitor of the platelet-derived growth factor receptor, and that calcium channel receptors and the protein osteopontin were essential for the regulation of gel-mediated induction of stemness in brain cancer cells.
Keyphrases
- cancer stem cells
- hyaluronic acid
- growth factor
- wound healing
- endothelial cells
- resting state
- white matter
- drug delivery
- high glucose
- papillary thyroid
- stem cells
- functional connectivity
- cerebral ischemia
- diabetic rats
- induced apoptosis
- type diabetes
- squamous cell carcinoma
- drug induced
- oxidative stress
- skeletal muscle
- lymph node
- network analysis
- cell cycle arrest
- optical coherence tomography
- pi k akt
- young adults
- stress induced
- epithelial mesenchymal transition
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- diabetic retinopathy
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- lymph node metastasis
- small molecule