| Literature DB >> 26496034 |
Xiang-Jun Tang1, Xu-Yong Sun2, Kuan-Ming Huang1, Li Zhang1, Zhuo-Shun Yang1, Dan-Dan Zou1, Bin Wang1,3, Garth L Warnock4, Long-Jun Dai1,4, Jie Luo1.
Abstract
Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR)-based T-cell adoptive immunotherapy is a distinctively promising therapy for cancer. The engineering of CARs into T cells provides T cells with tumor-targeting capabilities and intensifies their cytotoxic activity through stimulated cell expansion and enhanced cytokine production. As a novel and potent therapeutic modality, there exists some uncontrollable processes which are the potential sources of adverse events. As an extension of this impactful modality, CAR-T cell-derived exosomes may substitute CAR-T cells to act as ultimate attackers, thereby overcoming some limitations. Exosomes retain most characteristics of parent cells and play an essential role in intercellular communications via transmitting their cargo to recipient cells. The application of CAR-T cell-derived exosomes will make this cell-based therapy more clinically controllable as it also provides a cell-free platform to diversify anticancer mediators, which responds effectively to the complexity and volatility of cancer. It is believed that the appropriate application of both cellular and exosomal platforms will make this effective treatment more practicable.Entities:
Keywords: cancer therapy; chimeric antigen receptor (CAR); exosomes; extracellular vesicles; immunotherapy
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26496034 PMCID: PMC4792550 DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.6175
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncotarget ISSN: 1949-2553
The functional classification of exosomal proteins
| Biological function | Exosomal protein | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Exosome biogenesis | ESCRT(I,II,III), Alix, TSG(10,101), GAG | [ |
| Cytoskeleton organization | Actin, Adivillin, CAP1, Confilin, Moesin, Radixin, Talin, Tubulin | [ |
| Tetraspanins (membrane protein organization) | CD9, CD37, CD53, CD63, CD81, CD82 | [ |
| Transport and fusion | Annexins (I,II,IV,V,VI), RABGDI, RAP1B, RAB(5,7,11,27,35), Flotillin | [ |
| Targeting/adhesion | Integrins(α4β1,αMβ2,αLβ2,β2), CD11(a, b, c), MFG-E8/lactadherin, CD166,LFA-3/CD58, CD18, CD9, ALCAM, ICAM-1 | [ |
| Antigen presentation | MHC (I, II), CD86, HSC70, HSP84/90 | [ |
| Signal transduction | Gi2α/14-3-3, Gi3α, ERK2, FRL, Catenin, Fyn, Rho(A,C), GDI, Syntenin, G proteins | [ |
| Anti-apoptosis | Thioredoxine peroxidase, Alix, Galectin 3 | [ |
| Protection from lysis | CD55, CD59 | [ |
| Metabolic enzymes | ATP citrate lyase, ATPase, Thioredoxine peroxidase, Aldehyde reductase, Pyruvate kinase, GAPDH, AChE, Aspartate amino transferase, Fatty acid synthase, Glucose 6 phosphate isomerase | [ |
Cancer treatment-related functions of exosomes
| Function | Molecule | Tissue or cell | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tumor antigen carrier | Tumor antigen | Cancer cells | [ |
| Antigen presentation | MHC/antigen | B cell | [ |
| MHC/antigen | DCs | [ | |
| Directional cell motility | Syt7, R27a | Cancer cells | [ |
| Immune suppression | IL-10, B7-H1 | Cancer cells | [ |
| miR-let-7b | Treg cells | [ | |
| IL-4 | DCs | [ | |
| TGF-β | Cancer cells | [ | |
| Immune stimulation | MHC/antigen | DCs | [ |
| Immunotherapy | Tumor antigen | Cancer cells | [ |
| DCs | [ |
Figure 1Proposed scheme for the clinical application of CAR-T cell-derived exosomes
Peripheral blood sample (30-50 ml) is taken from cancer patient. Total nucleated cells are isolated through density separation or red blood cell lysate solution and cultured with T cell stimulators, such as antibodies for CD3 and CD28. CD8+ T cells are selected through positive or negative selection method and transfected with CARs through viral or non-viral transfection technology. CAR-engineered T cells are ex vivo expanded in the presence of IL-2. CAR-T cell-derived exosomes are isolated from culture media as described in the text. Exosomes are characterized by biomarker assessment and quantified by protein assay. Exosomes are infused into the same patient after preconditioning with chemotherapy.