| Literature DB >> 23508692 |
Abstract
In multicellular organisms both health and disease are defined by patterns of communication between the constituent cells. In addition to networks of soluble mediators, cells are also programed to exchange complex messages pre-assembled as multimolecular cargo of membraneous structures known extracellular vesicles (EV). Several biogenetic pathways produce EVs with different properties, and known as exosomes, ectosomes, and apoptotic bodies. In cancer, EVs carry molecular signatures and effectors of the disease, such as mutant oncoproteins, oncogenic transcripts, microRNA, and DNA sequences. Intercellular trafficking of such EVs (oncosomes) may contribute to horizontal cellular transformation, phenotypic reprograming, and functional re-education of recipient cells, both locally and systemically. The EV-mediated, reciprocal molecular exchange also includes tumor suppressors, phosphoproteins, proteases, growth factors, and bioactive lipids, all of which participate in the functional integration of multiple cells and their collective involvement in tumor angiogenesis, inflammation, immunity, coagulopathy, mobilization of bone marrow-derived effectors, metastasis, drug resistance, or cellular stemness. In cases where the EV role is rate limiting their production and uptake may represent and unexplored anticancer therapy target. Moreover, oncosomes circulating in biofluids of cancer patients offer an unprecedented, remote, and non-invasive access to crucial molecular information about cancer cells, including their driver mutations, classifiers, molecular subtypes, therapeutic targets, and biomarkers of drug resistance. New nanotechnologies are being developed to exploit this unique biomarker platform. Indeed, embracing the notion that human cancers are defined not only by processes occurring within cancer cells, but also between them, and amidst the altered tumor and systemic microenvironment may open new diagnostic and therapeutic opportunities.Entities:
Keywords: cancer; cellular interactions; exosomes; extracellular vesicles; oncogenes
Year: 2013 PMID: 23508692 PMCID: PMC3589665 DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2013.00021
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pharmacol ISSN: 1663-9812 Impact factor: 5.810
Figure 1Implications of the vesiculation process in cancer. Heterogeneous populations of cancer and host cells remain functionally interconnected. This process is, at least in part, mediated by extracellular vesicles (EVs) that shuttle molecules between different populations of cancer cells and between them and the non-transformed host stromal and blood cells. Cancer cells may include stem cell-like compartment (e.g., cells expressing CD133), or cells that express other surface molecules (MET, EGFR, EPCAM – see text) with important functions. Some of the more notable EV-mediated molecular exchanges described recently in the literature include: (i) transfer of oncogenes (ONC) from cancer cells to normal cells, a possible horizontal transformation of these cells resulting in changes in phenotype, as well as (in some cases) acquisition of tumorigenic properties; (ii) transfer of tumor suppressors (TSG), such as PTEN between cells, with a possible impact on negative control of cellular transformation; (iii) transfer of MET receptors from metastatic cancer cells to myeloid cells (CD11b+) to modulate metastatic niche effects; (iv) contribution of platelet-derived EVs (CD41+) to the metastatic phenotype of cancer cells, and several other effects; (v) shedding of EVs by activated endothelium (CD31+). While tumor-derived EVs constitute a minority within the pool of particles circulating in plasma, they can be detected for diagnostic purposes. The diagnostic and therapeutic opportunities, and challenges associated with studies on cellular vesiculation are described in the text in detail.
Possible applications of extracellular vesicles in cancer diagnosis and therapy.
| Potential application | Rationale and Hypothetical Effects | Relevant literature |
|---|---|---|
| EVs as diagnostic biomarker | Molecular diagnosis of cancer subtypes (e.g., marker or multiplex analysis of EV cargo, derivation of molecular signatures, involving proteins, mRNA, microRNA, and DNA) | Al-Nedawi et al. ( |
| Correlative diagnostic classifiers (e.g., through developing inventories of diagnostic proteins, nucleic acids, lipids associated with the EV fraction) | Taylor and Gercel-Taylor ( | |
| Detection of circulating EVs containing epithelial markers (e.g., EpCAM and other molecules normally not found in plasma are often associated with tumor-derived EVs and can serve as a biomarker of cancer) | Taylor et al. ( | |
| EVs as prognostic biomarker | Detection of cell-associated molecular markers related to disease aggressiveness (e.g., expression of oncogenic BRAF, MET, K-ras) | Al-Nedawi et al. ( |
| Prognostic signatures (e.g., detection of protein and nucleic acid profiles associated with specific disease outcomes) | Poste and Nicolson ( | |
| EVs as predictive biomarker | Detection of actionable drug targets (e.g., EGFRvIII for the related vaccine; HER-2 for trastuzumab; BRAF for vemurafenib) | Koga et al. ( |
| Changes in the levels, nature, state, and composition of drug targets, or their modifiers (e.g., P-EGFR and PTEN in glioma) | Al-Nedawi et al. ( | |
| Signatures of cancer cell and cancer stem cell states relevant to therapy (e.g., indicators of signaling events, stemness, EMT, hypoxia, metabolic alterations) | Marzesco et al. ( | |
| EVs as drug activity biomarker platform | Detection of drug target responses to therapeutics (e.g., activated/mutant states of oncoproteins, changes in levels of related phosphoproteins, gene expression signatures related to target inactivation or escape) | Al-Nedawi et al. ( |
| Detection of correlative markers associated with cellular responses to drug exposure (e.g., protein levels, markers of stress response, activation of apoptotic pathways) | Muller ( | |
| EVs as a pharmacodynamic and pharmacokinetic biomarkers | Markers of drug-target interactions (e.g., drug-target complexes, the presence of the drug in the EV cargo, as a reflection of drug-cell interaction; changes down-stream of the expected drug activity, Drug half-life in EVs versus plasma) | Zhuang et al. ( |
| EVs as indicators of resistance to specific anticancer agents | High levels of circulating EVs containing drug targets and their modifiers (HER-2-EVs may act as both antagonist and indicators of reduced efficacy of trastuzumab; the content of HER-3 in breast cancer EVs may suggest resistance to HER-2 inhibitors) | Ciravolo et al. ( |
| Mutant forms of drug targets (e.g., mutations of EGFR, such as L858R or T790M in circulating EVs may suggest either sensitivity or resistance to EGFR inhibitors, respectively; EV-associated mutant K-ras in colon cancer could be linked to resistance to cetuximab) | Linardou et al. ( | |
| Target multimerization (e.g., expression patterns of EGFR/HER related receptors in EVs may be suggestive of changing responses to EGFR or HER-2 antagonists) | Ritter et al. ( | |
| Detection of multidrug resistance markers and mediators (e.g., EVs may contain ABC transporters and other mediators of resistance to conventional chemotherapy) | Jaiswal et al. ( | |
| Host-derived EVs as indicators of changes in the tumor microenvironment, immunity, and metabolism | Changes in levels of immune cell-derived EVs (e.g., exosomes may inform as to the emerging immunosuppression) | Andre et al. ( |
| Presence of tumor antigens on host EVs and evidence of their presentation (e.g., exosomes emanating from dendritic cells could be informative as to the state of antitumor immunity; cancer-related exosomes may also have immune-suppressive activity) | Taylor and Gercel-Taylor ( | |
| Possible evidence of macrophage polarization and bone marrow cell recruitment (e.g., macrophage-related EVs may carry information as to the prevalence of M1 or M2 macrophages) | Qian and Pollard ( | |
| Possible detection of endothelial cell activation, damage, or death (e.g., in the context of antiangiogenic therapy endothelial EVs may alter their numbers, properties, and molecular composition; changes in VEGFR phosphorylation, IL-6 or IL-8 content, and other features in endothelial EVs may serve as biomarker of resistance to antiangiogenesis) | Diamant et al. ( | |
| EV-associated stromal determinants of cancer progression (e.g., stromal-derived exosomes may reflect composition of the cellular microenvironment in cancer subtypes, and be suggestive of disease aggressiveness; they may also reflect changes in the physical microenvironment (hypoxia), and be informative as to therapeutic responses, angiogenic activity, and other characteristics) | Finak et al. ( | |
| EVs as indicators of cancer associated syndromes | EV-associated prothrombotic activities (e.g., circulating tissue factor containing EVs may be predictive of cancer coagulopathy or disease aggressiveness) | Sartori et al. ( |
| EV-associated mediators of normal tissue toxicity (e.g., EVs could carry markers of cardiomyocyte damage, and reflect other toxic side effects that may occur during anticancer therapy; EV-associated miRs and other molecules may correlate with the state of affected tissues) | Fichtlscherer et al. ( | |
| Therapeutic blockade of EV production by cancer cells | Interference with molecular pathways of exosome biogenesis (e.g., silencing of Rab27a/b, neutral sphingomyelinase, and other pathways) | Trajkovic et al. ( |
| Pharmacological blockade of ectosomal pathways (e.g., targeting floppases, sphingomyelinases, Rho, Arf6, AKT) | Bianco et al. ( | |
| Therapeutic blockade of EV production by host cells | Inhibition of myeloid cell vesiculation (e.g., FTY720 and other similar acting agents may influence the EV-mediated components of neuroinflammation, which may be relevant to the progression of brain tumors; similar effects could be applicable to other cancers) | Verderio et al. ( |
| Inhibition of vesicular interactions within the angiogenic cell compartment (e.g., targeting endothelial exosomes may prevent angiogenic interactions between progenitor cells and mature endothelial cells) | Deregibus et al. ( | |
| Therapeutic blockade of EV uptake | Blockade of surface PS residues with Annexin V analogs and other agents (e.g., Diannexin and similarly acting agents may prevent EVs from interacting with surfaces of target cells) | Al-Nedawi et al. ( |
| Blockade of PS receptors on recipient cells (e.g., similar approaches as above could conceivably also change the surface properties of recipient cells preventing them from interacting with EVs) | Zhou ( | |
| Blockade of other receptors involved in EV-cell interactions (e.g., PSGL1 is responsible for interactions between EVs (particles) and cellular P-selectin. These processes can be antagonized pharmacologically with antibodies and other agents) | Furie and Furie ( | |
| Targeting elements of the EV cargo | Antimirs directed at microRNA involved in intercellular communication (e.g., antagonizing cellular miRs would be expected to deplete them from the EV fraction) | Zhang et al. ( |
| Kinase inhibitors (e.g., inhibitors of EGFR can impede the consequences of EV-mediated EGFR transfer between cells) | Al-Nedawi et al. ( | |
| Elimination of tumor-related EVs from the circulation | Medical devices can be used to eliminate cancer derived exosomes from the circulating blood | Marleau et al. ( |
| Generation of EVs with pathway antagonistic activity | Interference with signaling pathways by presenting ligands or receptors on the surface of EVs (e.g., exosomes harboring Dll4 alter Notch signaling in recipient cells and could modulate tumor angiogenesis) | Sheldon et al. ( |
| EVs as drug delivery systems | Exosomes can be engineered to carry therapeutic molecules across tissue barriers (e.g., EVs can introduce siRNA into brain cells leading to gene downregulation) | Alvarez-Erviti et al. ( |
| EVs may potentially serve as vehicles to deliver tumor suppressors to cancer cells (e.g., suppressor microRNA, mRNA, and proteins may be delivered to target cells as cargo of exosomes; horizontal transfer of PTEN may serve to oppose cellular transformation) | Putz et al. ( | |
| EVs as a cancer vaccine platform | Dendritic cell-derived exosomes may be used as cell-free cancer vaccine (e.g., dendritic cells may produce exosomes with the ability to present cancer antigens while being devoid of the risks and problems associated with manipulating viable or attenuated cancer cells) | Andre et al. ( |
*These are presently largely theoretical possibilities, as no approved cancer therapy currently uses EVs as a tool, target, or companion diagnostic. The references do not provide evidence for these hypothetical scenarios, but merely point to the literature that may be relevant, or suggestive of a potential mechanism that may lead to EV use, development or feasibility of the respective approaches, as listed in the table.