Publication | Closed Access
A side population of cells from a human pancreatic carcinoma cell line harbors cancer stem cell characteristics
103
Citations
18
References
2009
Year
Cell TherapyPathologyCancer BiologyTumor BiologyPancreatic CancerTumor HeterogeneityStem Cell TraffickingRadiation OncologyCancer ResearchCancer Stem CellsHealth SciencesSp CellsSide PopulationCell BiologyTumor MicroenvironmentHuman CellLineage PlasticityStem Cell ResearchDna-binding Dye EffluxMedicine
We used flow cytometry and a DNA-binding dye efflux assay to isolate a side population (SP) of cells with stem cell characteristics from the human pancreatic carcinoma cell line, PANC-1. Non-obese diabetic/severe combined immunodeficiency mouse xenograft experiments showed that SP cells were enriched in tumor initiating capability compared with non-SP cells. Cultured SP cells were able to differentiate into daughter cells and non-SP cells, through asymmetric division. Our study demonstrated that SP cells had high drug-resistance, both in vivo and in vitro. SP cells also showed significantly higher levels of mRNA expression for CD133, ABCG2 and Notch1, when compared to non-SP cells. Furthermore, xenografted tumors derived from injected SP cells and treated with gemcitabine had more CD133+ cells than untreated ones. We therefore suggest that these SP cells from the PANC-1 cell line were enriched with cancer stem cells.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1