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dc.creatorMcCubrey, James A
dc.creatorSteelman, Linda S
dc.creatorAbrams, Stephen L
dc.creatorMisaghian, Negin
dc.creatorChappell, William H
dc.creatorBaesecke, Joerg
dc.creatorNicoletti, Ferdinando
dc.creatorLibra, Massimo
dc.creatorLigresti, Giovanni
dc.creatorStivala, Franca
dc.creatorMaksimović-Ivanić, Danijela
dc.creatorMijatović, Sanja
dc.creatorMontalto, Giuseppe
dc.creatorCervello, Melchiorre
dc.creatorLaidler, Piotr
dc.creatorBonati, Antonio
dc.creatorEvangelisti, Camilla
dc.creatorCocco, Lucio
dc.creatorMartelli, Alberto M
dc.date.accessioned2017-11-23T11:12:29Z
dc.date.available2015-11-17T10:26:51Z
dc.date.issued2012sr
dc.identifier.issn1381-6128sr
dc.identifier.otherRad_konverzija_3178sr
dc.identifier.urihttps://radar.ibiss.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/1183
dc.description.abstractAn area of therapeutic interest in cancer biology and treatment is targeting the cancer stem cell, more appropriately referred to as the cancer initiating cell (CIC). CICs comprise a subset of hierarchically organized, rare cancer cells with the ability to initiate cancer in xenografts in genetically modified murine models. CICs are thought to be responsible for tumor onset, self-renewal/maintenance, mutation accumulation and metastasis. CICs may lay dormant after various cancer therapies which eliminate the more rapidly proliferating bulk cancer (BC) mass. However, CICs may remerge after therapy is discontinued as they may represent cells which were either intrinsically resistant to the original therapeutic approach or they have acquired mutations which confer resistance to the primary therapy. In experimental mouse tumor transplant models, CICs have the ability to transfer the tumor to immunocompromised mice very efficiently while the BCs are not able to do so as effectively. Often CICs display increased expression of proteins involved in drug resistance and hence they are intrinsically resistant to many chemotherapeutic approaches. Furthermore, the CICs may be in a suspended state of proliferation and not sensitive to common chemotherapeutic and radiological approaches often employed to eliminate the rapidly proliferating BCs. Promising therapeutic approaches include the targeting of certain signal transduction pathways (e.g., RAC, WNT, PI3K, PML) with small molecule inhibitors or targeting specific cell-surface molecules (e.g., CD44), with effective cytotoxic antibodies. The existence of CICs could explain the high frequency of relapse and resistance to many currently used cancer therapies. New approaches should be developed to effectively target the CIC which could vastly improve cancer therapies and outcomes. This review will discuss recent concepts of targeting CICs in certain leukemia models.en
dc.description.sponsorshipFondazione Carisbo; MinSan; PRIN; FIRB [RBAP10447J]sr
dc.language.isoEnglishsr
dc.rightsrestrictedAccess
dc.sourceCurrent Pharmaceutical Designsr
dc.titleTargeting the Cancer Initiating Cell: The Ultimate Target for Cancer Therapyen
dc.typereview
dc.rights.licenseARR
dcterms.abstractМијатовић, Сања A.; МцЦубреy, Јамес A; Стеелман, Линда С; Aбрамс, Степхен Л; Мисагхиан, Негин; Цхаппелл, Wиллиам Х; Баесецке, Јоерг; Ницолетти, Фердинандо; Либра, Массимо; Лигрести, Гиованни; Максимовић-Иванић, Данијела Д.; Стивала, Франца; Монталто, Гиусеппе; Цервелло, Мелцхиорре; Лаидлер, Пиотр; Бонати, Aнтонио; Евангелисти, Цамилла; Цоццо, Луцио; Мартелли, Aлберто М;
dc.citation.issue13sr
dc.citation.volume18sr
dc.citation.epage1795sr
dc.type.versionpublishedVersionen
dc.citation.rankM21
dc.identifier.rcubhttps://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_ibiss_1183


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