Cancer stem cells (CSCs, also called tumor initiating cells) are a rare population of cells present in many tumors. CSCs have the capacity to asymmetrically divide giving rise to nonstem cancer cells (nonCSCs) and more CSCs. CSCs are more resistant to therapy than nonCSCs, and a general observation is that therapy increases the number of CSCs. This likely contributes to the treatment resistance seen in patients with advanced disease. Great effort, therefore, is being placed at targeting CSCs in different cancers. Fas is a death receptor that can induce apoptosis in many tissues, most notably in the cells of the immune system. While Fas can kill tumor cells by inducing apoptosis under certain circumstances, we recently found that knocking down Fas or FasL induces a different form of cell death, necrosis, in all cancer cells. We coined this form of cell death DICE (for death induced by CD95/CD95L elimination). Preliminary data indicate that DICE preferentially affects CSCs suggesting that CSCs are addicted to Fas. Based on the observation that treatment refractory cancer is often enriched in CSCs induction of DICE creates an opportunity to target drug resistant cancers by eliminating CSCs. We hypothesize that Fas acts as an essential survival factor for CSCs and that DICE preferentially targets CSCs. We propose to study three specific aims:
Specific Aim 1 : Study the role of nonapoptotic Fas signaling, canonical Fas-mediated apoptosis, and DICE induction for CSCs and nonCSCs. Hypothesis: Fas can kill nonstem cancer cells (nonCSCs) but it is essential for the survival of CSCs.
Specific Aim 2 : Explore the mechanism of how Fas regulates CSC fate. Hypothesis: Fas mediates its CSC promoting activities through activation of STAT1.
Specific Aim 3 : Determine the effect of DICE induction on human CSCs in vivo. Hypothesis: Fas protects CSCs in primary cancers from death. This proposal will test the function of Fas as a protector of CSCs in breast and ovarian cancer. However, our data on multiple other cancer types (both cell lines and mouse models) suggest that this activity is not limited to women's cancer and may have fundamental significance for all solid cancers. This study will determine whether it is possible to deplete cancers of CSCs by inducing DICE and will begin the exploration of the downstream events that mediate this novel CSC-preserving activity of Fas. This proposal brings together recent findings on the role of Fas in cancer cells, the plasticity of CSCs, the function of miRNAs in CSCs, the role of CSCs in therapy resistance, and the concept of targeting CSCs with the ultimate goal to improve therapy.

Public Health Relevance

Fas (CD95/APO-1) is viewed as a dedicated apoptosis inducing receptor that predominantly regulates immune cell homeostasis but recent data suggest a very different and critical cell survival function for this receptor. In this proposal wewill explore the activity of Fas to keep cancer stem cells alive using in vitro cell systems, in vivo mouse tumor models, and patient-in-mice xenografted (PDX) mice representing breast and ovarian cancer.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Cancer Institute (NCI)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
1R01CA178048-01A1
Application #
8891918
Study Section
Tumor Cell Biology Study Section (TCB)
Program Officer
Espey, Michael G
Project Start
2015-03-01
Project End
2020-02-29
Budget Start
2015-03-01
Budget End
2016-02-29
Support Year
1
Fiscal Year
2015
Total Cost
$353,419
Indirect Cost
$124,669
Name
Northwestern University at Chicago
Department
Internal Medicine/Medicine
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
005436803
City
Chicago
State
IL
Country
United States
Zip Code
60611
Qadir, Abdul S; Ceppi, Paolo; Brockway, Sonia et al. (2017) CD95/Fas Increases Stemness in Cancer Cells by Inducing a STAT1-Dependent Type I Interferon Response. Cell Rep 18:2373-2386