Profiling of Circulating Tumor Cells for Screening of Selective Inhibitors of Tumor‐Initiating Stem‐Like Cells

Author:

Chen Chia‐Lin1,Hernandez Juan Carlos12,Uthaya Kumar Dinesh Babu1,Machida Tatsuya1,Tahara Stanley M.1,El‐Khoueiry Anthony3,Li Meng4,Punj Vasu5,Swaminathan Suresh Kumar6,Kirtane Ameya6,Chen Yibu4,Panyam Jayanth6,Machida Keigo17ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Departments of Molecular Microbiology and Immunology University of Southern California Los Angeles CA 90033 USA

2. California State University Channel Islands Camarillo CA USA

3. Norris Comprehensive Cancer Center University of Southern California Keck School of Medicine Los Angeles CA 90033 USA

4. Norris Medical Library 2003 Zonal Ave Los Angeles CA 90089 USA

5. Department of Medicine University of Southern California Keck School of Medicine and Norris Comprehensive Cancer Center Los Angeles CA 90089 USA

6. Department of Pharmaceutics University of Minnesota Minneapolis MN 55455 USA

7. Southern California Research Center for ALPD and Cirrhosis Los Angeles CA 90033 USA

Abstract

AbstractA critical barrier to effective cancer therapy is the improvement of drug selectivity, toxicity, and reduced recurrence of tumors expanded from tumor‐initiating stem‐like cells (TICs). The aim is to identify circulating tumor cell (CTC)‐biomarkers and to identify an effective combination of TIC‐specific, repurposed federal drug administration (FDA)‐approved drugs. Three different types of high‐throughput screens targeting the TIC population are employed: these include a CD133 (+) cell viability screen, a NANOG expression screen, and a drug combination screen. When combined in a refined secondary screening approach that targets Nanog expression with the same FDA‐approved drug library, histone deacetylase (HDAC) inhibitor(s) combined with all‐trans retinoic acid (ATRA) demonstrate the highest efficacy for inhibition of TIC growth in vitro and in vivo. Addition of immune checkpoint inhibitor further decreases recurrence and extends PDX mouse survival. RNA‐seq analysis of TICs reveals that combined drug treatment reduces many Toll‐like receptors (TLR) and stemness genes through repression of the lncRNA MIR22HG. This downregulation induces PTEN and TET2, leading to loss of the self‐renewal property of TICs. Thus, CTC biomarker analysis would predict the prognosis and therapy response to this drug combination. In general, biomarker‐guided stratification of HCC patients and TIC‐targeted therapy should eradicate TICs to extend HCC patient survival.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

American Cancer Society

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Physics and Astronomy,General Engineering,Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology (miscellaneous),General Materials Science,General Chemical Engineering,Medicine (miscellaneous)

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