Journal article
Role of "cancer stem cells" and cell survival in tumor development and maintenance
JM Adams, PN Kelly, A Dakic, S Carotta, SL Nutt, A Strasser
Cold Spring Harbor Symposia on Quantitative Biology | Published : 2008
Abstract
One critical issue for cancer biology is the nature of the cells that drive the inexorable growth of malignant tumors. Reports that only rare cell populations within human leukemias seeded leukemia in mice stimulated the now widely embraced hypothesis that only such "cancer stem cells" maintain all tumor growth. However, the mouse microenvironment might instead fail to support the dominant human tumor cell populations. Indeed, on syngeneic transplantation of mouse lymphomas and leukemias, we and other investigators have found that a substantial proportion (>10%) of their cells drive tumor growth. Thus, dominant clones rather than rare cancer stem cells appear to sustain many tumors. Another ..
View full abstractGrants
Awarded by National Cancer Institute