Analysis of Epithelial and Mesenchymal Markers in Ovarian Cancer Reveals Phenotypic Heterogeneity and Plasticity

Robert Strauss(Danish Cancer Society), Zongyi Li(University of Washington Medical Center), Ying Liu(University of Washington Medical Center), Ines Beyer(University of Washington Medical Center), Jonas Persson(University of Washington Medical Center), Pavel Sova(University of Washington), Thomas Möller(University of Washington), Sari Pesonen(University of Helsinki), Akseli Hemminki(University of Helsinki), Petra Hamerlik(Institute of Molecular and Translational Medicine), Charles W. Drescher(Fred Hutch Cancer Center), Nicole Urban(Fred Hutch Cancer Center), Jiří Bártek(Palacký University Olomouc), André Lieber(University of Washington Medical Center)
PLoS ONE
January 14, 2011
Cited by 196Open Access
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Abstract

In our studies of ovarian cancer cells we have identified subpopulations of cells that are in a transitory E/M hybrid stage, i.e. cells that simultaneously express epithelial and mesenchymal markers. E/M cells are not homogenous but, in vitro and in vivo, contain subsets that can be distinguished based on a number of phenotypic features, including the subcellular localization of E-cadherin, and the expression levels of Tie2, CD133, and CD44. A cellular subset (E/M-MP) (membrane Ecadherin low /cytoplasmic E-cadherin high /CD133 high , CD44 high , Tie2 low ) is highly enriched for tumor-forming cells and displays features which are generally associated with cancer stem cells. Our data suggest that E/M-MP cells are able to differentiate into different lineages under certain conditions, and have the capacity for self-renewal, i.e. to maintain a subset of undifferentiated E/M-MP cells during differentiation. Trans-differentiation of E/M-MP cells into mesenchymal or epithelial cells is associated with a loss of stem cell markers and tumorigenicity. In vivo xenograft tumor growth is driven by E/M-MP cells, which give rise to epithelial ovarian cancer cells. In contrast, in vitro, we found that E/M-MP cells differentiate into mesenchymal cells, in a process that involves pathways associated with an epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition. We also detected phenotypic plasticity that was dependent on external factors such as stress created by starvation or contact with either epithelial or mesenchymal cells in co-cultures. Our study provides a better understanding of the phenotypic complexity of ovarian cancer and has implications for ovarian cancer therapy.


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