The blood-related cancer leukaemia was the first disease where human CSCs (cancer stem cells), or LSCs (leukaemic stem cells), were isolated. The haematopoietic system is one of the best tissues for investigating CSCs, since the developmental hierarchy of normal blood formation is well defined. Leukaemia can now be viewed as aberrant haematopoietic processes initiated by rare LSCs that have maintained or reacquired the capacity for indefinite proliferation through accumulated mutations and/or epigenetic changes. Yet, despite their critical importance, much remains to be learned about the developmental origin of LSCs and the mechanisms responsible for their emergence in the course of the disease. This report will review our current knowledge on LSC development and finally demonstrate how these discoveries provide a paradigm for identification of CSCs from solid tumours.
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Conference Article|
October 26 2005
Cancer stem cells: AMLs show the way
D. Bonnet
D. Bonnet
1
1Hematopoietic Stem Cell Laboratory, Cancer Research U.K., London Research Institute, 44 Lincoln's Inn Fields, London WC2A 3PX, U.K.
1To whom correspondence should be addressed (email dominique.bonnet@cancer.org.uk).
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Publisher: Portland Press Ltd
Received:
June 17 2005
Online ISSN: 1470-8752
Print ISSN: 0300-5127
© 2005 The Biochemical Society
2005
Biochem Soc Trans (2005) 33 (6): 1531–1533.
Article history
Received:
June 17 2005
Citation
D. Bonnet; Cancer stem cells: AMLs show the way. Biochem Soc Trans 26 October 2005; 33 (6): 1531–1533. doi: https://doi.org/10.1042/BST0331531
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