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Publication : Bmi1-positive cells in the lingual epithelium could serve as cancer stem cells in tongue cancer.

First Author  Tanaka T Year  2016
Journal  Sci Rep Volume  6
Pages  39386 PubMed ID  28004815
Mgi Jnum  J:254115 Mgi Id  MGI:6101870
Doi  10.1038/srep39386 Citation  Tanaka T, et al. (2016) Bmi1-positive cells in the lingual epithelium could serve as cancer stem cells in tongue cancer. Sci Rep 6:39386
abstractText  We recently reported that the polycomb complex protein Bmi1 is a marker for lingual epithelial stem cells (LESCs), which are involved in the long-term maintenance of lingual epithelial tissue in the physiological state. However, the precise role of LESCs in generating tongue tumors and Bmi1-positive cell lineage dynamics in tongue cancers are unclear. Here, using a mouse model of chemically (4-nitroquinoline-1-oxide: 4-NQO) induced tongue cancer and the multicolor lineage tracing method, we found that each unit of the tumor was generated by a single cell and that the assembly of such cells formed a polyclonal tumor. Although many Bmi1-positive cells within the tongue cancer specimens failed to proliferate, some proliferated continuously and supplied tumor cells to the surrounding area. This process eventually led to the formation of areas derived from single cells after 1-3 months, as determined using the multicolor lineage tracing method, indicating that such cells could serve as cancer stem cells. These results indicate that LESCs could serve as the origin for tongue cancer and that cancer stem cells are present in tongue tumors.
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