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Cancer stem cells display extremely large evolvability: alternating plastic and rigid networks as a potential Mechanism: Network models, novel therapeutic target strategies, and the contributions of hypoxia, inflammation and cellular senescence.

Csermely, Peter and Hódsági, János and Korcsmáros, Tamás and Módos, Dezső and Perez-Lopez, Aron R. and Szalay, Kristóf and Veres, Dániel V. and Lenti, Katalin and Wu, Ling-Yun and Zhang, Xiang-Sun (2014) Cancer stem cells display extremely large evolvability: alternating plastic and rigid networks as a potential Mechanism: Network models, novel therapeutic target strategies, and the contributions of hypoxia, inflammation and cellular senescence. Seminars in Cancer Biology. ISSN 1096-3650

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Abstract

Cancer is increasingly perceived as a systems-level, network phenomenon. The major trend of malignant transformation can be described as a two-phase process, where an initial increase of network plasticity is followed by a decrease of plasticity at late stages of tumor development. The fluctuating intensity of stress factors, like hypoxia, inflammation and the either cooperative or hostile interactions of tumor inter-cellular networks, all increase the adaptation potential of cancer cells. This may lead to the bypass of cellular senescence, and to the development of cancer stem cells. We propose that the central tenet of cancer stem cell definition lies exactly in the indefinability of cancer stem cells. Actual properties of cancer stem cells depend on the individual "stress-history" of the given tumor. Cancer stem cells are characterized by an extremely large evolvability (i.e. a capacity to generate heritable phenotypic variation), which corresponds well with the defining hallmarks of cancer stem cells: the possession of the capacity to self-renew and to repeatedly re-build the heterogeneous lineages of cancer cells that comprise a tumor in new environments. Cancer stem cells represent a cell population, which is adapted to adapt. We argue that the high evolvability of cancer stem cells is helped by their repeated transitions between plastic (proliferative, symmetrically dividing) and rigid (quiescent, asymmetrically dividing, often more invasive) phenotypes having plastic and rigid networks. Thus, cancer stem cells reverse and replay cancer development multiple times. We describe network models potentially explaining cancer stem cell-like behavior. Finally, we propose novel strategies including combination therapies and multi-target drugs to overcome the Nietzschean dilemma of cancer stem cell targeting: "what does not kill me makes me stronger".

Item Type: Article
Subjects: Q Science / természettudomány > QH Natural history / természetrajz > QH301 Biology / biológia > QH3015 Molecular biology / molekuláris biológia
Depositing User: Dr. Tamas Korcsmaros
Date Deposited: 30 Sep 2014 13:46
Last Modified: 30 Sep 2014 13:46
URI: http://real.mtak.hu/id/eprint/17323

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