| Literature DB >> 21560073 |
Bence György1, Tamás G Szabó, Mária Pásztói, Zsuzsanna Pál, Petra Misják, Borbála Aradi, Valéria László, Eva Pállinger, Erna Pap, Agnes Kittel, György Nagy, András Falus, Edit I Buzás.
Abstract
Release of membrane vesicles, a process conserved in both prokaryotes and eukaryotes, represents an evolutionary link, and suggests essential functions of a dynamic extracellular vesicular compartment (including exosomes, microparticles or microvesicles and apoptotic bodies). Compelling evidence supports the significance of this compartment in a broad range of physiological and pathological processes. However, classification of membrane vesicles, protocols of their isolation and detection, molecular details of vesicular release, clearance and biological functions are still under intense investigation. Here, we give a comprehensive overview of extracellular vesicles. After discussing the technical pitfalls and potential artifacts of the rapidly emerging field, we compare results from meta-analyses of published proteomic studies on membrane vesicles. We also summarize clinical implications of membrane vesicles. Lessons from this compartment challenge current paradigms concerning the mechanisms of intercellular communication and immune regulation. Furthermore, its clinical implementation may open new perspectives in translational medicine both in diagnostics and therapy.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21560073 PMCID: PMC3142546 DOI: 10.1007/s00018-011-0689-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Mol Life Sci ISSN: 1420-682X Impact factor: 9.261
Fig. 1Schematic representation of the extracellular vesicles. Major populations include exosomes, microvesicles and apoptotic bodies. To simplify the Figure, cells are not shown to release all types of vesicles
Fig. 2Summary of some adaptive cellular responses including the newly recognized vesiculation process. Of note, apoptosis itself involves vesicle release (shedding of apoptotic microvesicles and apoptotic bodies)
Fig. 3Size ranges of major types of membrane vesicles. While exosomes share size distribution with viruses, microvesicles overlap in size with bacteria and protein aggregates (e.g. immune complexes). Both apoptotic bodies and platelets fall into the size range of 1–5 μm
Key features of membrane vesicle populations
| Exosomes | Microvesicles | Apoptotic bodies | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Size range | Approximately 50–100 nm | 100–1,000 nm (~100–400 nm in blood plasma) [ | 1–5 μm [ |
| Mechanism of generation | By exocytosis of MVBs | By budding/blebbing of the plasma membrane | By release from blebs of cells undergoing apoptosis |
| Isolation | Differential centrifugation and sucrose gradient ultracentrifugation [ | Differential centrifugation [ | Established protocols are essentially lacking; most studies use co-culture with apoptotic cells instead of isolating apoptotic bodies |
| Detection | TEM, western blotting, mass spectrometry, flow cytometry (bead coupled) | Flow cytometry, capture based assays [ | Flow cytometry |
| Best characterized cellular sources | Immune cells and tumors | Platelets, red blood cells and endothelial cells | Cell lines |
| Markers | Annexin V binding, CD63, CD81, CD9, LAMP1 and TSG101 [ | Annexin V binding, tissue factor and cell-specific markers | Annexin V binding, DNA content |
| Recent review articles | [ | [ |
Fig. 4Transmission electron micrograph of a platelet from normal human blood plasma releasing membrane vesicles (pMVs). Original magnification ×30,000
Fig. 5Subcellular localization of proteins identified in exosomes (a) and MVs (b) The published proteomic studies are indicated by the name of the first author
Fig. 6Ingenuity Pathway Analysis (IPA) of data from meta-analyses of published proteomic studies on exosomes and microvesicles. a Molecules implicated in viral entry by caveola- and clathrin-mediated endocytosis as well as by macropinocytosis. Shaded symbols represent molecules identified in exosomes. As shown, several exosomal proteins are present in the IPA knowledgebase as molecules that facilitate the entry of different viruses. b Molecules involved in integrin signaling. Shaded symbols represent published microvesicle-associated proteins as key participants of integrin signaling
Top vesicle-associated canonical pathways identified by Ingenuity Pathway Analysis
| MPs/MVs | Exosome | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Canonical pathway |
| Ratio | Canonical pathway |
| Ratio |
| Actin cytoskeleton signaling | 6.05E−14 | 38/238 | Germ cell−Sertoli cell junction signaling | 1.20E−23 | 45/168 |
| Integrin signaling | 5.18E−11 | 32/205 | Integrin signaling | 1.65E−21 | 47/205 |
| RhoA signaling | 4.53E−09 | 21/110 | Caveolar mediated endocytosis signaling | 2.92E−21 | 30/85 |
| Caveolar mediated endocytosis signaling | 1.12E−08 | 17/85 | Virus entry via endocytic pathways | 1.58E−20 | 32/100 |
| Acute phase response signaling | 2.21E−08 | 26/183 | Ephrin receptor signaling | 2.42E−20 | 43/199 |
The P value is calculated using the right-tailed Fisher Exact Test. It is a measure of the likelihood that the association between a set of analyzed molecules and a given pathway is due to random chance. The “ratio” expresses the fraction of molecules fitting a given pathway within an analyzed dataset and the total number of molecules known to be associated with that pathway in Ingenuity’s knowledge base
Diagnostic or prognostic alterations of the extracellular vesicles
| Disorders | Type of vesicles | Alterations of the extracellular vesicular compartment | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Autoimmune diseases | |||
| Systemic lupus erythematosus | pMVs and eMVs | Elevated levels of pMVs and eMVs in blood plasma | [ |
| Anti-phospholipid syndrome | pMVs and eMVs | Elevated levels of eMVs and pMVs in blood plasma | [ |
| Rheumatoid arthritis | pMVs | Elevated levels of pMVs in blood plasma, elevated levels of annexin V+ MVs and pMVs in synovial fluid | [ |
| Systemic sclerosis | pMVs, eMVs and lMVs | Elevated levels of pMVs, eMVs and lMVs in blood plasma | [ |
| Vasculitis | pMVs, eMVs and lMVs | Increased number of pMVs and lMVs in acute vasculitis and increased numer of pMVs and eMVs in systemic vasculitis | [ |
| Type 1 diabetes mellitus | pMVs, eMVs | Increased number of eMVs and pMVs, increased total MV procoagulant activity | [ |
| Multiple sclerosis | pMVs, eMVs | Elevated levels of pMVs and elevated levels of eMVs during exacerbation | [ |
| Cardiovascular diseases | |||
| Acute coronary syndrome | pMVs, eMVs | High levels of procoagulant eMVs and pMVs are present in the circulating blood of patients. High eMV level was associated with high-risk angiographic lesions in patients with acute coronary syndromes. Levels of eMVs may predict future cardiovascular events in patients at high risk for congestive heart failure | [ |
| Hypertension | eMVs, pMVs | Levels of eMVs and pMVs correlate with blood pressure. Hypertensive patients with microalbuminuria have higher levels of eMVs compared to hypertensive patients without microalbuminuria | [ |
| Pulmonary hypertension | pMVs, eMVs, lMVs | eMVs predict severity of pulmonary hypertension. Elevated levels of pMVs, eMVs and lMVs predict vascular inflammation and hypercoagulability | [ |
| Congestive heart failure | eMVs | Apoptotic eMVs are elevated in patients with congestive heart failure. Furthermore, the levels of eMVs correlate with NYHA functional classes. Patients undergoing heart transplantation due to heart failure show altered phenotypes of eMVs | [ |
| Deep vein thrombosis (DVT) and venous thromboembolism | eMVs, pMVs | pMVs and eMVs are elevated in patients with DVT. Total MV count may serve as novel markers for DVT. Circulating MVs and pMVs are elevated in patients with acute pulmonary embolism | [ |
| Buerger’s disease | pMVs | pMVs are markers of exacerbation | [ |
| Atherosclerosis | lMVs, pMVs | CD11a positive lMVs predict subclinical atherosclerosis. pMVs are elevated in individuals with carotis atherosclerosis | [ |
| Cerebrovascular disorders | pMVs, eMVs, lMVs and erythrocyte MVs | pMVs are elevated in transient ischaemic attacks, lacunar infarcts and multiinfarct dementias. pMVs, eMVs, lMVs and erythrocyte MVs are elevated in patients with subarachnoid hemorrhage and are markers of vasospasm. Circulating eMV phenotypic profiles reflect distinct phenotypes of cerebrovascular disease | [ |
| Hematologic diseases | |||
| Paroxysmal nocturnal haemoglobinuria | eMVs | Elevated levels of eMVs | [ |
| Sickle cell disease | eMVs, pMVs, erythrocyte-MVs, | Elevated levels of total MVs, eMVs, pMVs and erythrocyte MVs, particularly in sickle cell crisis | [ |
| Immune thrombocytopenic purpura (ITP) | pMVs | pMVs are elevated in patients with acute ITP and decreased in chronic ITP | [ |
| Thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura | eMVs | Elevated levels of eMVs | [ |
| Cancer | |||
| Lung adenocarcinoma | Exosomes | Elevated level of exosomes and miRNA in blood plasma of patients. | [ |
| Glioblastoma | Tumor-derived exosomes | Tumor-specific EGFRvIII was detected in serum exosomes from patients | [ |
| Ovarian cancer | Tumor-derived exosomes | Exosomal miRNA from ovarian cancer patients exhibited distinct profiles compared to patients with benign disease | [ |
| Prostate cancer | Tumor-derived exosomes in blood and urine | Detection of tumor-specific exosomes in blood could be used as a screening test. Urinary exosomes contain biomarkers for prostate cancer | [ |
| Colorectal cancer | Tumor-derived exosomes | Detection of tumor-specific exosomes in blood could be used as a screening test | [ |
| Gastric cancer | pMVs | pMVs are markedly increased in patients with stage IV disease and might be useful for identifying metastatic gastric patients. | [ |
| Melanoma | Exosomes | Elevated CD63 and caveolin 1 on exosomes | [ |
| Oral cancer | Exosomes | Sera of patients with active oral squamous cell carcinoma contain FasL+ exososmes | [ |
| Cancer associated thrombosis | TF+ MVs | TF+ MVs are elevated in patients with colorectal carcinoma, multiple myeloma, breast and pancreatic adenocarcinoma | [ |
| Other diseases | |||
| Alzheimer’s disease | pMVs | pMVs carry amyloid β on their surface | [ |
| Type 2 diabetes mellitus | pMVs, lMVs | Elevated levels of pMVs, especially in patients with clinically apparent atherosclerosis, elevated percentage of TF+ MVs. Patients with nephropathy have higher number of monocyte-MVs | [ |
| Metabolic syndrome | MVs exposing TF, eMVs | The level of TF exposing MVs correlate with the components of metabolic syndrome. Pioglitazon has been shown to reduce eMV levels in patients with metabolic syndrome | [ |
| End-stage renal disease | eMVs, PMVs | Total annexin V+ MVs, pMVs, eMVs are elevated in patients with end-stage renal disease and patients with hemodialysis. eMVs predict vascular dysfunction and represent a marker of endothelial dysfunction | [ |
| Obstructive sleep apnoe | pMVs, lMVs, eMVs | Total annexin V+ MVs, pMVs, lMVs and eMVs are elevated in patients | [ |
| Preeclampsia | eMVs, lMVs, pMVs, synctiotrophoblast MVs. | Elevated levels of eMVs, syncytiotrophoblast MVs pMVs and lMVs | [ |
| Sepsis | pMVs, eMVs, granulocyte MVs | pMVs and eMVs are elevated in septic shock, but their elevation predicts favorable outcomes. Patients with meningococcal sepsis have elevated numbers of pMVs and granulocyte-derived MVs | [ |