Slow-cycling (dormant) cancer cells in therapy resistance, cancer relapse and metastasis
- PMID: 33979674
- PMCID: PMC8576068
- DOI: 10.1016/j.semcancer.2021.04.021
Slow-cycling (dormant) cancer cells in therapy resistance, cancer relapse and metastasis
Abstract
It is increasingly appreciated that cancer cell heterogeneity and plasticity constitute major barriers to effective clinical treatments and long-term therapeutic efficacy. Research in the past two decades suggest that virtually all treatment-naive human cancers harbor subsets of cancer cells that possess many of the cardinal features of normal stem cells. Such stem-like cancer cells, operationally defined as cancer stem cells (CSCs), are frequently quiescent and dynamically change and evolve during tumor progression and therapeutic interventions. Intrinsic tumor cell heterogeneity is reflected in a different aspect in that tumors also harbor a population of slow-cycling cells (SCCs) that are not in the proliferative cell cycle and thus are intrinsically refractory to anti-mitotic drugs. In this Perspective, we focus our discussions on SCCs in cancer and on various methodologies that can be employed to enrich and purify SCCs, compare the similarities and differences between SCCs, CSCs and cancer cells undergoing EMT, and present evidence for the involvement of SCCs in surviving anti-neoplastic treatments, mediating tumor relapse, maintaining tumor dormancy and mediating metastatic dissemination. Our discussions make it clear that an in-depth understanding of the biological properties of SCCs in cancer will be instrumental to developing new therapeutic strategies to prevent tumor relapse and distant metastasis.
Keywords: Cancer stem cells; Metastasis; Quiescence; Slow-cycling cells; Therapy resistance.
Copyright © 2021 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.
Conflict of interest statement
Conflict of interest
None.
Figures
References
-
- McGranahan N and Swanton C, Clonal Heterogeneity and Tumor Evolution: Past, Present, and the Future, Cell. 168(4) (2017) 613–28. - PubMed
-
- Walens A, Lin J, Damrauer JS, McKinney B, Lupo R, Newcomb R, Fox DB, Mabe NW, Gresham J, Sheng Z, Sibley AB, De Buysscher T, Kelkar H, Mieczkowski PA, Owzar K and Alvarez JV, Adaptation and selection shape clonal evolution of tumors during residual disease and recurrence, Nat Commun 11(1) (2020) 5017. - PMC - PubMed
Publication types
MeSH terms
Grants and funding
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Other Literature Sources
Medical
Miscellaneous
