Stemness Influences the Regenerative Potential of Cells Exposed to Chemotherapy
Eric Darling, Associate Professor of Medical Science, Engineering, and Orthopaedics, Brown University
In musculoskeletal tissues like bone, chemotherapy can impair progenitor
cell differentiation and proliferation, resulting in decreased bone
growth and mineralization throughout a patient’s lifetime. The current
study examined the effects of chemotherapy on mesenchymal stem cell
(MSC) regenerative characteristics compared to non-stem cells. The
proliferation of stem and non-stem cell types could be used as an in
vitro measure of susceptibility to common chemotherapeutic drugs.
Interestingly, MSCs showed no susceptibility to the highly prevalent
drug methotrexate (MTX), retaining both sustained proliferation and
multipotency capabilities after exposure. Investigation into the
mechanism behind cell response to MTX involved overexpression and
knockdown of dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR), the target of the drug.
Overexpression and endogenous nucleoside + amino acid delivery rescued
non-stem cell types from adverse effects, identifying DHFR as one
resistance mechanism and potential means of protecting beneficial cells
exposed to MTX. Furthermore, it was observed that undifferentiated MSCs
were more resistant than differentiating and terminally differentiated
cell types, suggesting that stemness could play a role in
chemotherapeutic resistance as well.
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