PLoS ONE (Jan 2013)

Elite model for the generation of induced pluripotent cancer cells (iPCs).

  • Jason Lai,
  • Chiou Mee Kong,
  • Dashayini Mahalingam,
  • Xiaojin Xie,
  • Xueying Wang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0056702
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 2
p. e56702

Abstract

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The inefficiency of generating induced pluripotent somatic cells (iPS) engendered two contending models, namely the Stochastic model and Elite model. Although the former is more favorable to explain the inherent inefficiencies, it may be fallible to extrapolate the same working model to reprogramming of cancer cells. Indeed, tumor cells are known to be inherently heterogeneous with respect to distinctive characteristics thus providing a suitable platform to test whether the reprogramming process of cancer cells is biased. Here, we report our observations that all randomly picked induced pluripotent cancer cells (iPCs) established previously do not possess mutations known in the parental population. This unanticipated observation is most parsimoniously explained by the Elite model, whereby putative early tumor progenies were selected during induction to pluripotency.