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Review ArticleReviewsR

Cancer Progenitor Cells: The Result of an Epigenetic Event?

KAROLINA LAPINSKA, GABRIELA FARIA, SANDRA MCGONAGLE, KATE MORGAN MACUMBER, SARAH HEERBOTH and SIBAJI SARKAR
Anticancer Research January 2018, 38 (1) 1-6;
KAROLINA LAPINSKA
1Quinnipiac University School of Medicine, North Haven, CT, U.S.A.
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GABRIELA FARIA
2Mass Bay Community College, Wellesley, MA, U.S.A.
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SANDRA MCGONAGLE
2Mass Bay Community College, Wellesley, MA, U.S.A.
3Quincy College, Quincy, MA, U.S.A.
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KATE MORGAN MACUMBER
2Mass Bay Community College, Wellesley, MA, U.S.A.
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SARAH HEERBOTH
4Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Nashville, TN, U.S.A.
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SIBAJI SARKAR
2Mass Bay Community College, Wellesley, MA, U.S.A.
3Quincy College, Quincy, MA, U.S.A.
5Roxbury Community College, Boston, MA, U.S.A.
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  • For correspondence: ssarkarmmb{at}gmail.com
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Abstract

The concept of cancer stem cells was proposed in the late 1990s. Although initially the idea seemed controversial, the existence of cancer stem cells is now well established. However, the process leading to the formation of cancer stem cells is still not clear and thus requires further research. This article discusses epigenetic events that possibly produce cancer progenitor cells from predisposed cells by the influence of their environment. Every somatic cell possesses an epigenetic signature in terms of histone modifications and DNA methylation, which are obtained during lineage-specific differentiation of pluripotent stem cells, which is specific to that particular tissue. We call this signature an epigenetic switch. The epigenetic switch is not fixed. Our epigenome alters with aging. However, depending on the predisposition of the cells of a particular tissue and their microenvironment, the balance of the switch (histone modifications and the DNA methylation) may be tilted to immortality in a few cells, which generates cancer progenitor cells.

  • Stem cells
  • cancer stem cells
  • cancer progenitor cells
  • epigenetics
  • methylation
  • histone modifications
  • signaling
  • cancer drug resistance
  • cancer combination therapy
  • review
  • Received September 5, 2017.
  • Revision received November 13, 2017.
  • Accepted November 15, 2017.
  • Copyright© 2018, International Institute of Anticancer Research (Dr. George J. Delinasios), All rights reserved
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January 2018
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Cancer Progenitor Cells: The Result of an Epigenetic Event?
KAROLINA LAPINSKA, GABRIELA FARIA, SANDRA MCGONAGLE, KATE MORGAN MACUMBER, SARAH HEERBOTH, SIBAJI SARKAR
Anticancer Research Jan 2018, 38 (1) 1-6;

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Cancer Progenitor Cells: The Result of an Epigenetic Event?
KAROLINA LAPINSKA, GABRIELA FARIA, SANDRA MCGONAGLE, KATE MORGAN MACUMBER, SARAH HEERBOTH, SIBAJI SARKAR
Anticancer Research Jan 2018, 38 (1) 1-6;
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Keywords

  • stem cells
  • cancer stem cells
  • cancer progenitor cells
  • epigenetics
  • methylation
  • histone modifications
  • signaling
  • cancer drug resistance
  • cancer combination therapy
  • review
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