Abstract

Abstract Transformed stem cells have been isolated from some human cancers. We report that, unlike other brain cancers, the lethal glioblastoma multiforme contains neural precursors endowed with all of the critical features expected from neural stem cells. Similar, yet not identical, to their normal neural stem cell counterpart, these precursors emerge as unipotent (astroglial) in vivo and multipotent (neuronal-astroglial-oligodendroglial) in culture. More importantly, these cells can act as tumor-founding cells down to the clonal level and can establish tumors that closely resemble the main histologic, cytologic, and architectural features of the human disease, even when challenged through serial transplantation. Thus, cells possessing all of the characteristics expected from tumor neural stem cells seem to be involved in the growth and recurrence of adult human glioblastomas multiforme.

Keywords

Neural stem cellStem cellBiologyCancer stem cellPathologyCancer researchGlioblastomaNeurosphereTransplantationNeuroscienceAdult stem cellCellular differentiationCell biologyMedicineGeneGeneticsInternal medicine

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Publication Info

Year
2004
Type
article
Volume
64
Issue
19
Pages
7011-7021
Citations
2554
Access
Closed

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Rossella Galli, Elena Binda, Ugo Orfanelli et al. (2004). Isolation and Characterization of Tumorigenic, Stem-like Neural Precursors from Human Glioblastoma. Cancer Research , 64 (19) , 7011-7021. https://doi.org/10.1158/0008-5472.can-04-1364

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DOI
10.1158/0008-5472.can-04-1364