TET2 controls chemoresistant slow-cycling cancer cell survival and tumor recurrence

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Abstract

Dormant or slow-cycling tumor cells can form a residual chemoresistant reservoir responsible for relapse in patients, years after curative surgery and adjuvant therapy. We have adapted the pulse-chase expression of H2BeGFP for labeling and isolating slow-cycling cancer cells (SCCCs). SCCCs showed cancer initiation potential and enhanced chemoresistance. Cells at this slow-cycling status presented a distinctive nongenetic and cell-autonomous gene expression profile shared across different tumor types. We identified TET2 epigenetic enzyme as a key factor controlling SCCC numbers, survival, and tumor recurrence. 5-Hydroxymethylcytosine (5hmC), generated by TET2 enzymatic activity, labeled the SCCC genome in carcinomas and was a predictive biomarker of relapse and survival in cancer patients. We have shown the enhanced chemoresistance of SCCCs and revealed 5hmC as a biomarker for their clinical identification and TET2 as a potential drug target for SCCC elimination that could extend patients' survival.

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APA

Puig, I., Tenbaum, S. P., Chicote, I., Arqués, O., Martínez-Quintanilla, J., Cuesta-Borrás, E., … Palmer, H. G. (2018). TET2 controls chemoresistant slow-cycling cancer cell survival and tumor recurrence. Journal of Clinical Investigation, 128(9), 3887–3905. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI96393

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