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Cancer stem-like cells stay in a plastic state ready for tumor evolution

Jiali Xu, Hou‐De Zhang, Zhihao Nie, Wenyou He, Yichao Zhao, Zhenhui Huang, Lin Jia, Zhiye Du, Baotong Zhang, Siyuan Xia

2025Neoplasia8 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

• The plasticity of CSCs results in intratumor heterogeneity in solid tumors. • CSCs play a central role in the development of adaptive therapeutic resistance. • CSC markers and intrinsic signaling pathways inspire CSC-targeted therapies. • Unique CSC microenvironment provides valuable insights for CSC-targeted therapies. Cell plasticity emerges as a novel cancer hallmark and is pivotal in driving tumor heterogeneity and adaptive resistance to different therapies. Cancer stem-like cells (CSCs) are considered the root of cancer. While first defined as tumor-initiating cells with the potential to develop a heterogeneous tumor, CSCs further demonstrate their roles in cancer metastasis and adaptive therapeutic resistance. Generally, CSCs come from the malignant transformation of somatic stem cells or the de-differentiation of other cancer cells. The resultant cells gain more plasticity and are ready to differentiate into different cell states, enabling them to adapt to therapies and metastatic ecosystems. Therefore, CSCs are likely the nature of tumor cells that gain cell plasticity. However, the phenotypic plasticity of CSCs has never been systematically discussed. Here, we review the distinct intrinsic signaling pathways and unique microenvironmental niches that endow CSC plasticity in solid tumors to adapt to stressful conditions, as well as emerging opportunities for CSC-targeted therapy.

Topics & Concepts

Stem cellBiologyCancer stem cellCancerCancer researchCell biologyGeneticsCancer Cells and MetastasisHippo pathway signaling and YAP/TAZMicrotubule and mitosis dynamics
Cancer stem-like cells stay in a plastic state ready for tumor evolution | Litcius