iScience (May 2022)

Emergence of hybrid states of stem-like cancer cells correlates with poor prognosis in oral cancer

  • Kavya Vipparthi,
  • Kishore Hari,
  • Priyanka Chakraborty,
  • Subhashis Ghosh,
  • Ankit Kumar Patel,
  • Arnab Ghosh,
  • Nidhan Kumar Biswas,
  • Rajeev Sharan,
  • Pattatheyil Arun,
  • Mohit Kumar Jolly,
  • Sandeep Singh

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 25, no. 5
p. 104317

Abstract

Read online

Summary: Cancer cell state transitions emerged as powerful mechanisms responsible for drug tolerance and overall poor prognosis; however, evidences were largely missing in oral cancer. Here, by multiplexing phenotypic markers of stem-like cancer cells (SLCCs); CD44, CD24 and aldehyde dehydrogenase (ALDH), we characterized diversity among multiple oral tumor tissues and cell lines. Two distinct patterns of spontaneous transitions with stochastic bidirectional interconversions on ‘ALDH-axis’, and unidirectional non-interconvertible transitions on ‘CD24-axis’ were observed. Interestingly, plastic ‘ALDH-axis’ was harnessed by cells to adapt to a Cisplatin tolerant state. Furthermore, phenotype-specific RNA sequencing suggested the possible maintenance of intermediate hybrid cell states maintaining stemness within the differentiating subpopulations. Importantly, survival analysis with subpopulation-specific gene sets strongly suggested that cell-state transitions may drive non-genetic heterogeneity, resulting in poor prognosis. Therefore, we have described the phenotypic-composition of heterogeneous subpopulations critical for global tumor behavior in oral cancer; which may provide prerequisite knowledge for treatment strategies.

Keywords