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BackgroundThe maturation cocktail composed of interleukin (IL)-6, IL-1β, tumor necrosis factor-α and prostaglandin E2 is considered the “gold standard” for inducing the maturation of dendritic cells (DCs) for use in cancer immunotherapy. Nevertheless, although this maturation cocktail induces increased expression of several activation markers, such as CD83, the co-stimulation molecules CD80, CD86 and CD40 and the chemokine receptor involved in DC homing in lymph nodes CCR7, the DC immune stimulatory function in vivo contrasts with this mature phenotype, and good clinical outcomes in patients with cancer treated with DC-based vaccines remain rare.MethodsPhenotypic characterization of the immunosuppressive status of DCs differentiated from peripheral blood mononuclear cells of healthy volunteers and matured with the “gold standard” cocktail was performed. Glucocorticoid-induced leucine zipper (GILZ) targeting small interfering RNA (siRNA) was electroporated into DCs after maturation to increase their immunogenicity.ResultsThe mature phenotype of DCs treated for 48 h with this cocktail was associated with the expression of several immunosuppressive regulators, including programmed cell death 1 ligand 1 (PD-L1), IL-10 and GILZ. Electroporation is a very efficient and safe way to deliver siRNA into DCs (80% of DCs receive at least one molecule of siRNA). Silencing GILZ in clinical-grade DCs by siRNA leads to a decrease of the PD-L1 expression associated with an increase in their IL-12 secretion and T-cell induction capability.ConclusionsGILZ silencing is a promising approach to achieving complete clinical-grade DC maturation and avoiding the immunosuppressive effects of the maturation cocktail on DCs intended for clinical use.  相似文献   

3.

Background

Consistently reported prognostic factors for glioblastoma (GBM) are age, extent of surgery, performance status, IDH1 mutational status, and MGMT promoter methylation status. We aimed to integrate biological and clinical prognostic factors into a nomogram intended to predict the survival time of an individual GBM patient treated with a standard regimen. In a previous study we showed that the methylation status of the DGKI promoter identified patients with MGMT-methylated tumors that responded poorly to the standard regimen. We further evaluated the potential prognostic value of DGKI methylation status.

Methods

399 patients with newly diagnosed GBM and treated with a standard regimen were retrospectively included in this study. Survival modelling was performed on two patient populations: intention-to-treat population of all included patients (population 1) and MGMT-methylated patients (population 2). Cox proportional hazard models were fitted to identify the main prognostic factors. A nomogram was developed for population 1. The prognostic value of DGKI promoter methylation status was evaluated on population 1 and population 2.

Results

The nomogram-based stratification of the cohort identified two risk groups (high/low) with significantly different median survival. We validated the prognostic value of DGKI methylation status for MGMT-methylated patients. We also demonstrated that the DGKI methylation status identified 22% of poorly responding patients in the low-risk group defined by the nomogram.

Conclusions

Our results improve the conventional MGMT stratification of GBM patients receiving standard treatment. These results could help the interpretation of published or ongoing clinical trial outcomes and refine patient recruitment in the future.  相似文献   

4.
《Phytomedicine》2015,22(2):277-282
Annotine is a lycopodane-type alkaloid isolated from the Icelandic club moss Lycopodium annotinum ssp. alpestre. Annotine does not inhibit acetylcholinesterase, as some other lycopodium alkaloids do, and other bioactivities have not been reported. The aim of this study was to determine the effects of annotine on maturation of dendritic cells (DCs) and their ability to activate allogeneic CD4+ T cells. Human monocyte-derived DCs were matured in the absence or presence of annotine at a concentration of 1, 10 or 100 μg/ml. The effect of the annotine on maturation of the DCs was determined by measuring concentration of cytokines in culture supernatant by ELISA and expression of surface molecules by flow cytometry. DCs matured in the absence or presence of annotine at 100 µg/ml were also co-cultured with allogeneic CD4+ T cells and concentration of cytokines in supernatants determined by ELISA and expression of surface molecules by flow cytometry. When cultured alone, DCs matured in the presence of annotine secreted less of the pro-inflammatory cytokines IL-6 and IL-23 and had a tendency toward less secretion of IL-12p40 than DCs matured in the absence of annotine. However, when DCs were matured in the presence of annotine and then co-cultured with allogeneic CD4+ T cells they secreted more IL-12p40 and had a tendency toward secreting more IL-6 than DCs matured in the absence of annotine and then co-cultured with T cells. Allogeneic CD4+ T cells co-cultured with DCs matured in the presence of annotine secreted more IL-13 than T cells co-cultured with DCs matured in the absence of annotine, but stimulating the DCs in the presence of annotine did not affect T cell secretion of IFN-γ and IL-17. There was also more IL-10 in co-cultures of T cells and DCs matured in the presence of annotine than in co-cultures of T cells and DCs matured in the absence of annotine. These results show that annotine increases the ability of DCs to direct the differentiation of allogeneic CD4+ T cells toward a Th2/Treg phenotype, which may be of interest in the development of new treatments for Th1- and/or Th17-mediated inflammatory diseases.  相似文献   

5.
Glioblastoma (GBM) with oligodendroglioma component (GBMO) is a newly described GBM subtype in the 2007 World Health Organization classification. However, its biological and genetic characteristics are largely unknown. We investigated the clinicopathological and molecular features of 34 GBMOs and compared the survival rate of these patients with those of patients with astrocytoma, oligodendroglioma, anaplastic oligoastrocytoma (AOA), and conventional GBMs in our hospital. GBMO could be divided into two groups based on the presence of an IDH1 mutation. The IDH1 mutation was more frequently found in secondary GBMO, which had lower frequencies of EGFR amplification but higher MGMT methylation than the wild type IDH1 group, and patients with mutant IDH1 GBMO were on average younger than those with wild-type IDH1. Therefore, GBMO is a clinically and molecularly heterogeneous subtype, largely belonging to a proneural and classical subtype of GBM. The survival rate of GBMO patients itself was worse than that of AOA patients but not significantly better than that of conventional GBM patients. GBMO survival was independent of the dominant histopathological subtype i.e., astrocyte-dominant or oligodendroglioma -dominant, but it was significantly associated with the IDH1 mutation and MGMT methylation status. Therefore, GBMO should be regarded as a separate entity from AOA and must be classified as a subtype of GBM. However, further study is needed to determine whether it is a pathologic variant or a pattern of GBM because GBMO has a similar prognosis to conventional GBMs.  相似文献   

6.
Due to the low number of collectable stem cells from single umbilical cord blood(UCB)unit,their initial uses were limited to pediatric therapies.Clinical applications of UCB hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells(HSPCs)would become feasible if there were a culture method that can effectively expand HSPCs while maintaining their self-renewal capacity.In recent years,numerous attempts have been made to expand human UCB HSPCs in vitro.In this study,we report that caffeic acid phenethyl ester(CAPE),a small molecule from honeybee extract,can promote in vitro expansion of HSPCs.Treatment with CAPE increased the percentage of HSPCs in cultured mononuclear cells.Importantly,culture of CD34+HSPCs with CAPE resulted in a significant increase in total colony-forming units and high proliferative potential colony-forming units.Burst-forming unit-erythroid was the mostly affected colony type,which increased more than 3.7-fold in 1μg mL 1CAPE treatment group when compared to the controls.CAPE appears to induce HSPC expansion by upregulating the expression of SCF and HIF1-α.Our data suggest that CAPE may become a potent medium supplement for in vitro HSPC expansion.  相似文献   

7.
Human umbilical cord blood (UCB) cells are an alternative source of hematopoietic stem cells for treatment of leukemia and other diseases. It is very difficult to assess the quality of UCB cells in the clinical situation. Here, we sought to assess the quality of UCB cells by transplantation to immunodeficient mice. Cryopreserved CD34+ UCB cells from twelve different human donors were transplanted into sublethally irradiated NOD/shi-scid Jic mice. In parallel, the gene expression profiles of the UCB cells were determined from oligonucleotide microarrays. UCB cells from three donors failed to establish an engraftment in the host mice, while the other nine succeeded to various extents. Gene expression profiling indicated that 71 genes, including HOXB4, C/EBP-β, and ETS2, were specifically overexpressed and 23 genes were suppressed more than 2-fold in the successful UCB cells compared to those that failed. Functional annotation revealed that cell growth and cell cycle regulators were more abundant in the successful UCB cells. Our results suggest that hematopoietic ability may vary among cryopreserved UCB cells and that this ability can be distinguished by profiling expression of certain sets of genes.  相似文献   

8.
Dendritic cells (DCs) are activated by signaling via pathogen-specific receptors or exposure to inflammatory mediators. Here we show that co-culturing DCs with apoptotic HIV-infected activated CD4(+) T cells (ApoInf) or apoptotic uninfected activated CD4(+) T cells (ApoAct) induced expression of co-stimulatory molecules and cytokine release. In addition, we measured a reduced HIV infection rate in DCs after co-culture with ApoAct. A prerequisite for reduced HIV infection in DCs was activation of CD4(+) T cells before apoptosis induction. DCs exposed to ApoAct or ApoInf secreted MIP-1α, MIP-1β, MCP-1, and TNF-α; this effect was retained in the presence of exogenous HIV. The ApoAct-mediated induction of co-stimulatory CD86 molecules and reduction of HIV infection in DCs were partially abrogated after blocking TNF-α using monoclonal antibodies. APOBEC3G expression in DCs was increased in co-cultures of DCs and ApoAct but not by apoptotic resting CD4(+) T cells (ApoRest). Silencing of APOBEC3G in DC abrogated the HIV inhibitory effect mediated by ApoAct. Sequence analyses of an env region revealed significant induction of G-to-A hypermutations in the context of GG or GA dinucleotides in DNA isolated from DCs exposed to HIV and ApoAct. Thus, ApoAct-mediated DC maturation resulted in induction of APOBEC3G that was important for inhibition of HIV-infection in DCs. These findings underscore the complexity of differential DC responses evoked upon interaction with resting as compared with activated dying cells during HIV infection.  相似文献   

9.
Germinal center dendritic cells (GCDCs) have been identified as CD11c(+) CD4(+) CD3(-) cells located in GCs with the ability of inducing marked proliferation of allogenic T cells. Using immunofluorescence techniques, we have observed that this CD11c(+) CD4(+) CD3(-) immunophenotype identified GCDCs but also a subset of extrafollicular DCs. By flow cytometry, we were able to discriminate the GCDCs (CD11c(high) CD4(high) lin(-)) from the other tonsil DCs. By immunofluorescence and flow cytometry, we found that dendritic cells of germinal centers express more intracellular adhesion molecule-1 (ICAM-1) (CD54) than extrafollicular dendritic cells. Proliferation of peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) induced by coculture with purified CD11c(+) CD4(+) CD3(-) DCs was reduced by addition of blocking anti-CD54 antibodies. In summary, distinct levels of ICAM-1 expression allow the distinction between GCDCs and extrafollicular DCs, and cellular interactions mediated by CD54 are likely to play a role in the capacity of GCDC to stimulate allogenic PBMC proliferation.  相似文献   

10.
《Cytotherapy》2023,25(7):718-727
BackgroundAdoptive T cell therapy (ATCT) has been successful in treating hematological malignancies and is currently under investigation for solid-tumor therapy. In contrast to existing chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cell and/or antigen-specific T cell approaches, which require known targets, and responsive to the need for targeting a broad repertoire of antigens in solid tumors, we describe the first use of immunostimulatory photothermal nanoparticles to generate tumor-specific T cells.MethodsSpecifically, we subject whole tumor cells to Prussian blue nanoparticle-based photothermal therapy (PBNP-PTT) before culturing with dendritic cells (DCs), and subsequent stimulation of T cells. This strategy differs from previous approaches using tumor cell lysates because we use nanoparticles to mediate thermal and immunogenic cell death in tumor cells, rendering them enhanced antigen sources.ResultsIn proof-of-concept studies using two glioblastoma (GBM) tumor cell lines, we first demonstrated that when PBNP-PTT was administered at a “thermal dose” targeted to induce the immunogenicity of U87 GBM cells, we effectively expanded U87-specific T cells. Further, we found that DCs cultured ex vivo with PBNP-PTT–treated U87 cells enabled 9- to 30-fold expansion of CD4+ and CD8+ T cells. Upon co-culture with target U87 cells, these T cells secreted interferon-ɣ in a tumor-specific and dose-dependent manner (up to 647-fold over controls). Furthermore, T cells manufactured using PBNP-PTT ex vivo expansion elicited specific cytolytic activity against target U87 cells (donor-dependent 32–93% killing at an effector to target cell (E:T) ratio of 20:1) while sparing normal human astrocytes and peripheral blood mononuclear cells from the same donors. In contrast, T cells generated using U87 cell lysates expanded only 6- to 24-fold and killed 2- to 3-fold less U87 target cells at matched E:T ratios compared with T cell products expanded using the PBNP-PTT approach. These results were reproducible even when a different GBM cell line (SNB19) was used, wherein the PBNP-PTT–mediated approach resulted in a 7- to 39-fold expansion of T cells, which elicited 25–66% killing of the SNB19 cells at an E:T ratio of 20:1, depending on the donor.ConclusionsThese findings provide proof-of-concept data supporting the use of PBNP-PTT to stimulate and expand tumor-specific T cells ex vivo for potential use as an adoptive T cell therapy approach for the treatment of patients with solid tumors.  相似文献   

11.
《Cytotherapy》2019,21(10):1049-1063
Human CD141+ dendritic cells (DCs), specialized for cross-presentation, have been extensively studied in the development of DC-based therapy against cancer. A series of attempts was made to generate CD141+ DCs from cord blood CD34+ hematopoietic progenitors to overcome the practical limitation of in vivo rareness. In the present study, we identified a culture system that generates high CD141+ DCs. After culture of CD14+ monocytes in the presence of granulocyte macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) and interleukin (IL)-4 for 8 days, CD141 was detected on cells that adhered to the bottom of the culture plate. The attached cells exhibited typical features of immature monocyte-derived DCs (moDCs), except for higher CD86 expression, more dendrites and higher granularity compared with those that did not attach. With 3 additional days of culture, increased CD141 expression on the cells was retained along with adhesion ability and partial expression of CLEC9A, a c-type lectin receptor. Furthermore, the cells exhibited effective uptake of dead cells. Interestingly, the attached moDCs differently responded to polyinosinic:polycytidylic acid (poly I:C) stimulation as well as a mixed lymphocyte reaction. Collectively, our findings show that human CD141+ DCs can be sufficiently generated from peripheral blood CD14+ monocytes, potentiating further investigation into generation of higher yields of cross-priming human DCs in vitro.  相似文献   

12.
13.
A novel indirect co-culture system was established to support ex vivo expansion of hematopoietic progenitors in umbilical cord blood (UCB) by using thrombopoietin (TPO)/Flt-3 ligand (FL)-transduced human-marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells (tfhMSCs) as a feeder. UCB CD34+ cells were isolated and cultured by using five culture systems in serum-containing or serum-free medium. Suitable aliquots of cultured cells were taken to monitor cell production, clonogenic activity, and long-term culture-initiating culture (LTC-IC) output. Finally, the severe-combined immunodeficient mouse (SCID) repopulating cell (SRC) assay was performed to confirm the ability of the indirect co-cultured cells from the tfhMSCs system to reconstitute long-term hematopoiesis. Results showed significant differences in the number of total nucleated cells (TNCs) among the culture systems with respect to serum-containing medium or serum-free medium during 14-day culture. In addition, on day 14, the outputs of CD34+ cells, the colony-forming units (CFUs) in culture, and the CFUs in mixed colonies containing erythroid and myeloid cells and megakaryocytes in the tfhMSC indirect co-culture system were significantly enhanced. The LTC-IC assay demonstrated that the tfhMSCs indirect co-culture system had the strongest activity. The SCID-SRC assay confirmed the extensive ability of the expanded cells from the tfhMSCs indirect co-culture systems to reconstitute long-term hematopoiesis. Furthermore, polymerase chain reaction analysis demonstrated the presence of human hematopoietic cells in the bone marrow and peripheral blood cells of non-obese diabetic/SCID mice. Thus, hMSCs transduced with TPO/FL, in combination with additive cytokines, can effectively expand hematopoietic progenitors from UCB in vitro. The tfhMSC indirect co-culture system may therefore be a suitable system for ex vivo manipulation of primitive progenitor cells under non-contact culture conditions.This work was supported by the Zhejiang Scientific Foundation (no. 2003C23015).  相似文献   

14.
Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) can suppress dendritic cells (DCs) maturation and function, mediated by soluble factors, such as indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase (IDO), prostaglandin E2 (PGE2), and nitric oxide (NO). Interleukin-10 (IL-10) is a common immunosuppressive cytokine, and the downstream signaling of the JAK-STAT pathway has been shown to be involved with DCs differentiation and maturation in the context of cancer. Whether IL-10 and/or the JAK-STAT pathway play a role in the inhibitory effect of MSCs on DCs maturation remains controversial. In our study, we cultured MSCs and DCs derived from rat bone marrow under different culturing conditions. Using Transwell plates, we detected by ELISA that the level of IL-10 significantly increased in the supernatants of MSC-DC co-cultures at 48 hours. The cell immunofluorescence assay suggested that the MSCs secreted more IL-10 than the DCs in the co-cultures. Adding exogenous IL-10 to the DCs monoculture or MSC-DC co-cultures stimulated IL-10 and led to a decrease in IL-12, and lower expression of the DCs surface markers CD80, CD86, OX62, MHC-II and CD11b/c. Supplementing the culture with an IL-10 neutralizing antibody (IL-10NA) showed precisely the opposite effect of adding IL-10. Moreover, we demonstrated that the JAK-STAT signaling pathway is involved in inhibiting DCs maturation. Both JAK1 and STAT3 expression and IL-10 secretion decreased markedly after adding a JAK inhibitor (AG490) to the co-culture plate. We propose that there is an IL-10 positive feedback loop, which may explain our observations of elevated IL-10 and enhanced JAK1 and STAT3 expression. Overall, we demonstrated that MSCs inhibit the maturation of DCs through the stimulation of IL-10 secretion, and by activating the JAK1 and STAT3 signaling pathway.  相似文献   

15.
Cytokine-induced killer (CIK) cells have reached clinical trials for leukemia and solid tumors. Their anti-tumor cytotoxicity had earlier been shown to be intensified after the co-culture with dendritic cells (DCs). We observed markedly enhanced anti-tumor cytotoxicity activity of CIK cells after the co-culture with sunitinib-pretreated DCs over that of untreated DCs. This cytotoxicity was reliant upon DC modulation by sunitinib because the direct exposure of CIK cells to sunitinib had no significant effect. Sunitinib promoted Th1-inducing and pro-inflammatory phenotypes (IL-12, IFN-γ and IL-6) in DCs at the expense of Th2 inducing phenotype (IL-13) and regulatory phenotype (PD-L1, IDO). Sunitinib-treated DCs subsequently induced the upregulation of Th1 phenotypic markers (IFN-γ and T-bet) and the downregulation of the Th2 signature (GATA-3) and the Th17 marker (RORC) on the CD3+CD56+ subset of CIK cells. It concluded that sunitinib-pretreated DCs drove the CD3+CD56+ subset toward Th1 phenotype with increased anti-tumor cytotoxicity.  相似文献   

16.
Glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) represents an extremely chemoresistant tumour type. Here, authors analysed the immunophenotype of GBM tumours by flow cytometry and correlated the immunophenotypic characteristics with sensitivity to chemotherapy. The expression of selected neural and non-neural differentiation markers including A2B5, CD34, CD45, CD56, CD117, CD133, EGFR, GFAP, Her-2/neu, LIFR, nestin, NGFR, Pgp and vimentin was analysed by flow cytometry in eleven GBM (WHO gr.IV) patients. The sensitivity of tumour cells to a panel of chemotherapeutic agents was tested by the MTT assay. All tumours were positive for A2B5, CD56, nestin and vimentin. CD133, EGFR, LIFR, NGFR and Pgp were expressed only by minor tumour cell subpopulations. CD34, CD45, CD117, GFAP and Her-2/neu were constantly negative. Direct correlations were found between the immunophenotypic markers and chemosensitivity: A2B5 vs lomustine (r2 = 0.642, P = 0.033), CD56 vs cisplatin (r2 = 0.745, P = 0.013), %Pgp+ vs vincristine (r2 = 0.846, P = 0.008), and %NGFR+ vs daunorubicine (r2 = 0.672, P = 0.047) and topotecan (r2 = 0.792, P = 0.011). In contrast, inverse correlations were observed between: EGFR vs paclitaxel (r2 = ?0.676, P = 0.046), CD133 vs dacarbazine (r2 = ?0.636, P = 0.048) and LIFR vs daunorubicine (r2 = ?0.878, P = 0.004). Finally, significant associations were also found among sensitivities to different chemotherapeutic agents and among different immunophenotypic markers. In conclusion, histopathologically identical GBM tumours displayed a marked immunophenotypic heterogeneity. The expression of A2B5, CD56, NGFR and Pgp appeared to be associated with chemoresistance whereas CD133, EGFR and LIFR expression was characteristic of chemosensitive tumours. We suggest that flow cytometric imunophenotypic analysis of GBM may predict chemoresponsiveness and help to identify patients who could potentially benefit from chemotherapy.  相似文献   

17.
Immunotherapy based on natural killer (NK) cell infusions is a potential adjuvant treatment for many cancers. Such therapeutic application in humans requires large numbers of functional NK cells that have been selected and expanded using clinical grade protocols. We established an extremely efficient cytokine-based culture system for ex vivo expansion of NK cells from hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells from umbilical cord blood (UCB). Systematic refinement of this two-step system using a novel clinical grade medium resulted in a therapeutically applicable cell culture protocol. CD56+CD3 NK cell products could be routinely generated from freshly selected CD34+ UCB cells with a mean expansion of >15,000 fold and a nearly 100% purity. Moreover, our protocol has the capacity to produce more than 3-log NK cell expansion from frozen CD34+ UCB cells. These ex vivo-generated cell products contain NK cell subsets differentially expressing NKG2A and killer immunoglobulin-like receptors. Furthermore, UCB-derived CD56+ NK cells generated by our protocol uniformly express high levels of activating NKG2D and natural cytotoxicity receptors. Functional analysis showed that these ex vivo-generated NK cells efficiently target myeloid leukemia and melanoma tumor cell lines, and mediate cytolysis of primary leukemia cells at low NK-target ratios. Our culture system exemplifies a major breakthrough in producing pure NK cell products from limited numbers of CD34+ cells for cancer immunotherapy.  相似文献   

18.
Human NK cells are classified into two populations according to the intensity of CD56 surface expression, as well as possession of CD16, FcRIII. CD56dimCD16bright make up 90% circulating NK cells, whereas CD56brightCD16-/dim comprises the remaining 10%. Here we report that peripheral NK cells upon CD16 cross-linking up-regulates the expression of activating markers and receptors such as CD25, CD69, NKp44, NKp30, CD40L and the intensity of CD56 expression. Additionally, co-culturing immature DCs with CD16 activated NK cells was found to significantly increase the expression of maturation markers on DCs. These results suggest that CD16 cross-linking on resting peripheral blood NK cells triggers the activation of these cells and induces the appearance of CD56bright NK cells. The latter were found capable of producing pro-inflammatory cytokines, IFN-γ and TNF-α and notably IL-12.  相似文献   

19.
Cancer stem cell (CSC) theory suggests that only a small subpopulation of cells having stem cell-like potentials can initiate tumor development. While recent data on acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) are conflicting, some studies have demonstrated the existence of such cells following CD34-targeted isolation of primary samples. Although CD34 is a useful marker for the isolation of CSCs in leukemias, the identification of other specific markers besides CD34 has been relatively unsuccessful. To identify new markers, we first performed extensive analysis of surface markers on several B-ALL cell lines. Our data demonstrated that every B-ALL cell line tested did not express CD34 but certain lines contained cell populations with marked heterogeneity in marker expression. Moreover, the CD9+ cell population possessed stem cell characteristics within the clone, as demonstrated by in vitro and transplantation experiments. These results suggest that CD9 is a useful positive-selection marker for the identification of CSCs in B-ALL.  相似文献   

20.
CD133 can be a marker of tumorigenic CSCs (cancer stem cells) in human GBM (glioblastoma multiforme), although tumorigenic CD133-negative CSCs have been also isolated. Additional evidence indicates that CSCs from GBM exhibit different phenotypes, with increasing interest in the potential significance of the different CSCs with respect to diagnosis, prognosis and the development of novel targets for treatment. We have analysed the expression of CD133 in freshly isolated cells from 15 human GBM specimens. Only 4 of them contained cells positive for AC133 by FACS analysis, and all of them yielded distinct CSC lines, whereas only 6 CSC lines were obtained from the other 11 GBMs. Of these 10 CSCs lines, we further characterized 6 CSC lines. Three CSCs grew as fast-growing neurospheres with higher clonogenic ability, whereas the remaining 3 grew as slow-growing semi-adherent spheres of lower clonogenicity. In addition, the former CSC lines displayed better differentiation capabilities than the latter ones. PCR and Western blot analysis showed that all 6 GBM CSC lines expressed CD133/prominin-1, suggesting that cells negative by FACS analysis may actually represent cells expressing low levels of CD133 undetected by FACS. Nevertheless, all the 6 CSC lines were tumorigenic in nude mice. In conclusion, CSCs from human primary GBMs show different phenotypes and variable levels of CD133 expression, but these parameters did not directly correlate with the tumorigenic potential.  相似文献   

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