| Literature DB >> 26487960 |
Hamideh Mahmoodzadeh Hosseini1, Raheleh Halabian1, Mohsen Amin1, Abbas Ali Imani Fooladi1.
Abstract
Rising worldwide cancer incidence and resistance to current anti-cancer drugs necessitate the need for new pharmaceutical compounds and drug delivery system. Malfunction of the immune system, particularly in the tumor microenvironment, causes tumor growth and enhances tumor progression. Thus, cancer immunotherapy can be an appropriate approach to provoke the systemic immune system to combat tumor expansion. Texosomes, which are endogenous nanovesicles released by all tumor cells, contribute to cell-cell communication and modify the phenotypic features of recipient cells due to the texosomes' ability to transport biological components. For this reason, texosome-based delivery system can be a valuable strategy for therapeutic purposes. To improve the pharmaceutical behavior of this system and to facilitate its use in medical applications, biotechnology approaches and mimetic techniques have been utilized. In this review, we present the development history of texosome-based delivery systems and discuss the advantages and disadvantages of each system.Entities:
Keywords: Cancer therapy; immunotherapy; texosome mimetic; tumor microenvironment
Year: 2015 PMID: 26487960 PMCID: PMC4607826 DOI: 10.7497/j.issn.2095-3941.2015.0045
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Biol Med ISSN: 2095-3941 Impact factor: 4.248
Figure 1Schematic review for development history of texosome-based delivery system.
Figure 2Effect of texosomes on the discrepant immune cells located in tumor microenvironment.
First-generation texosome-based delivery system for cancer therapy
| Source of texosome | Treatment protocol | Type of cancer | Outcome | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| L1210 cell line | Vaccination with texosomes | Leukemia | Inhibitory impact on tumor growth, CTL mediated antitumor immunity | |
| A20 (H-2d) B cell lymphoma/leukemia cell line, CT-26 colon adenocarcinoma cells | Vaccination with heat shocked texosome and texosome | Lymphoma, colon cancer, leukemia | CTL mediated antitumor immunity, heat stress produces texosome with higher efficiency against tumor | |
| CT26 mouse colon carcinoma cells, B16-F1 mouse melanoma cells | Vaccination with dendritic cells pulsed with heat shock texosomes | Melanoma, colon cancer | Th1-mediated antitumor responses, rise IgG2a and IFN-γ production | |
| CT26 and TA3HA mouse cell line | Vaccination with texosome derived from cell transfected with human MUC1 | Colon cancer | Immune cell activation, inhibitory effect on growth of hMUC1-expressing tumor | |
| Several pancreatic cancer cell lines | Pancreatic cancer | Stimulation of mitochondria mediated apoptosis and through p13k/Akt/GSK-3β | ||
| Soj-6 pancreatic cancer cell line | Pancreatic cancer | Triggering apoptosis based on notch signaling | ||
| Dendritic cells pulsed with texosome | Mesothelioma | Robust CTL mediated antitumor immunity |
Studies based on improved texosomal delivery system for cancer therapy
| Texosome source | Modification method | Type of cargo | Type of cancer | Outcomes | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| HeLa, HT1080 human fibrosarcoma cell | Chemical treatment, electroporation | SiRNAs against RAD51 or RAD52 | − | Effective post-transcriptional gene silencing, massive reproductive cell death | |
| Breast cancer cell lines (HCC70, HCC1954, and MCF-7) | Gene transfection | let-7a, siRNA against EGFR, anti-EGFR peptide | Breast cancer | Inhibitory impact on the growth of breast cancer tumor model | |
| Mouse immature dendritic cells | Gene transfection combined with electroporation | (Lamp2b) fused to αv integrin-specific iRGD peptide, doxorubicin | Breast cancer | Efficient targeting and delivery to tumor cells, suppression of tumor growth without obvious toxicity | |
| EL-4 | Incubation at 22 °C for 5 min | Curcumin and cucurbitacin I (Stat3 inhibitor) | GL26 brain tumor model | Prolong the growth of brain tumor, decrease the inflammation in brain, rising microglia cell apoptosis | |
| HEK-293T cells | Gene transfection | Cytosine deaminase (CD) fused to uracil phosphoribosyltransferase (UPRT) (suicide gene) | Schwannoma tumors | Inhibition of tumor growth after treatment with modified exosomes accompanied with systematic administration of 5-FC | |
| A murine melanoma cell line B16F1 | Cell transduction to the CIITA gene (Class II transactivator) | High amount of MHC class II | Melanoma | Increase the proliferation of splenocyte and IL-2 release; enhance levels of TNF-α, chemokine receptor CCR7, and IL-12; delay tumor growth | |
| J558 myeloma cell line | Gene transfection | Texosome contains membrane-bounded HSP70 pulsed with dendritic cells | Melanoma | CTL and NK cell-mediated antitumor responses | |
| Texosome display | Staphylococcal enterotoxin A anchored texosome | Lymphoma | Inhibitory impact on the growth of tumor; increase INF-γ and IL-2; prolong survival time | ||
| Marrow stromal cell | Transfection | Cel-miR-67 and hsa-miR-146b | 9L gliosarcoma | M146-exo reduce tumor size | |
| E.G7-OVA tumor cells | Transfection | Texosome containing IL-2 | E.G7-OVA tumor cells | Induction of antitumor response by Th1 cells, CTL and NK cells, inhibitory effect on tumor growth | |
| MCA101 C57Bl/6 fibrosarcoma | Transfection | Tumor antigen bounded to vesicle compared with soluble one | Fibrosarcoma | Inhibitory effect on tumor growth and induction antitumor immune response in bounded manner compared with soluble factor | |
| MDA MB-231, MIA PACA-2, SKOV-3 | Exosome display technology | Staphylococcal enterotoxin B anchored tumoral exosome | Breast cancer, pancreatic cancer, ovarian cancer | Induction of apoptosis via intrinsic pathway | |
| Texosome mimetic | |||||
| U937cells, Raw 264.7 cells, and CT26 cells | Cell was extruded through 10, 5, and 1 μm filters | Chemotherapeutic drug-loaded texosomes | Colon adenocarcinoma | Dose-dependent TNF-α mediated cell death, inhibitory effect on tumor growth, and induction of antitumor immune responses | |
| Embryonic stem cells | Extrusion through microchannels | Native mRNAs of Oct 3/4 and Nanog | NIH-3T3 fibroblasts | An efficient exosome mimetic method to deliver and express mRNA |
Clinical trials based on exosome delivery system for cancer therapy.
| Drug | Effects | Disease | Status | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Patient’s dexosome loaded with MAGE3 | Rise the quantity of NK cells, expression of NKG2D in CD8+ and NK cells, minor toxicity, lack of specific CD8+ response | Melanoma stage IIIb/IV (phase I) | Completed | |
| Patient’s dexosome loaded with MAGE3 | Prolong disease stabilization, rise NK cell activity, minor toxicity, lack of specific CD8+ response | Non-small cell lung cancer III/IV (phase I) | Completed | |
| Patient’s dexosome combined with chemotherapy (metronomic cyclophosphamide) | Higher immunostimulatory impact on T cells, suppress disease progression | Unresectable Non-small cell lung cancer | Completed | NCT01159288 |
| Patient’s exosome combined with GM-CSF | Specific CD8+ response, no specific response after treating with exosome | Colorectal cancer stage III/IV (phase I) | Completed | |
| Grape-derived exosomes | For attenuation of oral mucositis and pain related to chemotherapy and radiotherapy | Head and neck cancer | Ongoing | NCT01668849 |
| Curcumin loaded exosome from the plant | For cancer treatment | Colorectal cancer | Ongoing | NCT01294072 |