BMC Cell Biology (Jan 2013)

Evaluation of characteristics of CD44<sup>+</sup>CD117<sup>+</sup> ovarian cancer stem cells in three dimensional basement membrane extract scaffold versus two dimensional monocultures

  • Chen Junsong,
  • Wang Jing,
  • Chen Dengyu,
  • Yang Jie,
  • Yang Cuiping,
  • Zhang Yunxia,
  • Zhang Hongyi,
  • Dou Jun

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2121-14-7
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
p. 7

Abstract

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Abstract Background Cancer stem cells (CSCs) are thought to be capable of surviving conventional chemotherapeutic treatments because the cells have more resistant to anticancer drugs than common cancer cells. Most in vitro studies in experimental cancer cells have been done in a two-dimensional (2D) monocultures, while accumulating evidence suggests that cancer cells behave differently when they are grown within a three-dimensional (3D) culture system. Results The CD44+CD117+cells isolated from human epithelial ovarian cancer SKOV-3 cell line using magnetic-activated cell sorting were found to grow faster than the SKOV-3 cells in the 3D culture and in the nude mice. Anticancer drugs 5FU, docetaxel, cisplatin, and carboplatin were seen to inhibit growth of the CD44+CD117+ cells by 50% in the 2D culture with IC50 concentration, whereas, in the 3D culture, the four drugs inhibited the cell growth by only 34.4%, 40.8%, 34.8% and 21.9% at 3D one, respectively. Effect of paclitaxel on the CD44+CD117+cell viability indicated that fewer cells underwent apoptosis in 3D culture than that in 2D one. In addition, anticancer drugs markedly increased the expression of ABCG2 and ABCB1 of CD44+CD117+cells in 3D culture. Conclusion Our assay demonstrated that human epithelial ovarian cancer CD44+CD117+cells possessed the properties of CSCs that exhibited more chemoresistance in the 3D culture than that of in 2D one. The 3D culture provides a realistic model for study of the CSC response to anticancer drugs.

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