Journal
BRITISH JOURNAL OF CANCER
Volume 109, Issue 12, Pages 3023-3033Publisher
NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/bjc.2013.691
Keywords
prostate cancer; stem cells; radiation; DNA damage
Categories
Funding
- Yorkshire Cancer Research (YCR) Core Grant
- YCR Project Grant [Y253, Y256]
- The Freemasons Grand Charity
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Background: Radiotherapy can be an effective treatment for prostate cancer, but radiorecurrent tumours do develop. Considering prostate cancer heterogeneity, we hypothesised that primitive stem-like cells may constitute the radiation-resistant fraction. Methods: Primary cultures were derived from patients undergoing resection for prostate cancer or benign prostatic hyperplasia. After short-term culture, three populations of cells were sorted, reflecting the prostate epithelial hierarchy, namely stem-like cells (SCs, alpha(2)beta(1)integrin(hi)/CD133(+)), transit-amplifying (TA, alpha(2)beta(1)integrin(hi)/ CD133(-) and committed basal (CB, alpha(2)beta(1)integrin(lo)) cells. Radiosensitivity was measured by colony-forming efficiency (CFE) and DNA damage by comet assay and DNA damage foci quantification. Immunofluorescence and flow cytometry were used to measure heterochromatin. The HDAC (histone deacetylase) inhibitor Trichostatin A was used as a radiosensitiser. Results: Stem-like cells had increased CFE post irradiation compared with the more differentiated cells (TA and CB). The SC population sustained fewer lethal double-strand breaks than either TA or CB cells, which correlated with SCs being less proliferative and having increased levels of heterochromatin. Finally, treatment with an HDAC inhibitor sensitised the SCs to radiation. Interpretation: Prostate SCs are more radioresistant than more differentiated cell populations. We suggest that the primitive cells survive radiation therapy and that pre-treatment with HDAC inhibitors may sensitise this resistant fraction.
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