| Literature DB >> 23894228 |
Michelle E Marcus1, Joshua N Leonard.
Abstract
Many aspects of intercellular communication are mediated through "sending" and "receiving" packets of information via the secretion and subsequent receptor-mediated detection of biomolecular species including cytokines, chemokines, and even metabolites. Recent evidence has now established a new modality of intercellular communication through which biomolecular species are exchanged between cells via extracellular lipid vesicles. A particularly important class of extracellular vesicles is exosomes, which is a term generally applied to biological nanovesicles ~30-200 nm in diameter. Exosomes form through invagination of endosomes to encapsulate cytoplasmic contents, and upon fusion of these multivesicular endosomes to the cell surface, exosomes are released to the extracellular space and transport mRNA, microRNA (miRNA) and proteins between cells. Importantly, exosome-mediated delivery of such cargo molecules results in functional modulation of the recipient cell, and such modulation is sufficiently potent to modulate disease processes in vivo. It is possible that such functional delivery of biomolecules indicates that exosomes utilize native mechanisms (e.g., for internalization and trafficking) that may be harnessed by using exosomes to deliver exogenous RNA for therapeutic applications. A complementary perspective is that understanding the mechanisms of exosome-mediated transport may provide opportunities for "reverse engineering" such mechanisms to improve the performance of synthetic delivery vehicles. In this review, we summarize recent progress in harnessing exosomes for therapeutic RNA delivery, discuss the potential for engineering exosomes to overcome delivery challenges and establish robust technology platforms, and describe both potential challenges and advantages of utilizing exosomes as RNA delivery vehicles.Entities:
Keywords: cancer; exosome; extracellular vesicle; gene therapy; immunity; nanoparticle; siRNA delivery
Year: 2013 PMID: 23894228 PMCID: PMC3722064 DOI: 10.3390/ph6050659
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmaceuticals (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8247
Figure 1Conceptual overview of exosome-based therapeutics: (1) Exosome biogenesis. Exosomes incorporate membrane components from the plasma and endosomal membranes, cytoplasmic proteins and RNA. Plasma membrane proteins reach exosomes via endocytosis into the endosomes followed by invagination of the endosomal membrane to form intraluminal vesicles (intracellular precursors of exosomes). An endosome containing many such intraluminal vesicles is termed a multivesicular body. Upon invagination of the endosomal membrane, endosomal membrane proteins also get incorporated into intraluminal vesicles. During invagination, cytoplasmic contents including RNA and proteins are engulfed into the lumen of the intraluminal vesicles. Upon backfusion of the multivesicular body with the plasma membrane, intraluminal vesicles are released into the extracellular space and are then termed exosomes. (2) Ex vivo modification of exosomes. Nucleic acids can be introduced to the exosome lumen via electroporation, and lipophilic small molecules can be passively loaded. (3) Exosome delivery. Exosomes are internalized by recipient cells via macropinocytosis, receptor-mediated endocytosis, or lipid raft-mediated endocytosis, each of which results in exosomes being taken up into endosomes. Exosomal contents are then released into the cytoplasm via backfusion with the endosomal membrane. Alternatively, exosomes can fuse directly with the recipient cell plasma membrane to release exosomal contents into the cytoplasm. Mechanisms of internalization utilized depend on the ligands displayed on the exosome surface, the cell type from which the exosomes are derived, and the recipient cell type.
Functional consequences of exosome delivery to recipient cells.
| Exosome source | Recipient cell type | Cargo delivered | Functional consequences | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||
| EBV transformed human B cells | Human Monocyte-derived DC | Viral miRNA | Down-regulate immune response to virus | [ |
| Serum of pregnant human patients | Human Jurkat T cells | FasL | Suppress CD3ζ signaling and IL-2 production | [ |
| Murine BMDC overexpressing IL-10 | Murine T cells | Antigen, presented on MHCII | Suppress T cell proliferation | [ |
|
| ||||
| Murine BMDC | Murine CD8+ and CD4+ T cells ( | Antigen, presented on MHC | Induce T cell proliferation | [ |
| CD28 stimulated human CD3+ T cells | Unstimulated human CD3+ T cells | Unidentified | T cell activation, induction of proliferation and cytokine production when co-delivered with IL-2 | [ |
| Murine BMDC | Murine BMDC (allogeneic) | Antigen | Transfer of foreign antigen, followed by foreign antigen presentation to and activation of T cells | [ |
|
| ||||
| Human H9 CD4+ T cells | Human Jurkat T cells, Human PMBC | APOBEC3 protein (HIV replication inhibitor) | Reduce HIV replication | [ |
| Human Endothelial cells | Human Aortic Smooth Muscle Cells | miR-143, miR-145 | Reduce atherosclerotic lesions | [ |
| Murine MSC | Murine Primary Neurons | miR-133b | Neurite outgrowth after injury | [ |
|
| ||||
| Human B cell lymphoma cell lines | None | Bind and sequester rituximab (antibody used in B cell lymphoma immunotherapy) | [ | |
| Human CSF | None | Phosphorylated tau | Transport of neurotoxic protein in Alzheimer’s disease | [ |
| Human PMBC derived DC incubated with HIV | Jurkat T cell line expressing CCR5 | HIV viral particles | Delivery of functional HIV viral particles encapsulated in exosomes, leading to HIV infection of recipient cells | [ |
Exosome isolation methods
| Isolation method | Advantages | Disadvantages | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|
| Differential centrifugation | Potentially high yields | Time-consuming | [ |
| HPLC + centrifugation | High throughput | Low yields | [ |
| Affinity beads | High throughput | Selection of exosome population subset | [ |
| Polymer-based precipitation | Potentially high yields | No method for removing polymer from exosome sample | [ |
| Filtration + centrifugation | Potentially high yields | Time-consuming | [ |