Periodic Reporting for period 1 - BRECASTEM (Functional and Molecular Characterisation of Breast Cancer Stem Cells)
Período documentado: 2017-03-01 hasta 2019-02-28
1) Firstly, cancer stem cells were isolated from the rest of the tumour cells in a genetically engineered mouse model of breast cancer and analysed to identify characteristic genes that could be responsible for their cancer stem cell behaviour;
2) Secondly, mouse tumour cells were grown in culture and the candidate “cancer stem cell genes” identified in part 1 were targeted one by one to see the effects on the cultured tumour cells.
Work from part 1 produced a detailed analysis of gene expression in cancer stem cells marked by Lgr6 in comparison with other tumour cells (giving a list of candidate “cancer stem cell genes”), which was exploited in part 2. Results from part 2 demonstrated that several of these candidate cancer stem cell genes are involved in resistance to the chemotherapy drug doxorubicin. Together, the project results are being explored in further research to determine which of these candidate genes are most important for chemoresistance, how they work, and whether targeting cancer stem cells can inhibit tumour relapse. The initial results have been
disseminated informally within the research community and will be formally published in a peer-reviewed scientific journal with open access to the public once the research has been completed.