| Literature DB >> 27517914 |
Ilaria Prada1, Jacopo Meldolesi2.
Abstract
Exosomes and ectosomes, extracellular vesicles of two types generated by all cells at multivesicular bodies and the plasma membrane, respectively, play critical roles in physiology and pathology. A key mechanism of their function, analogous for both types of vesicles, is the fusion of their membrane to the plasma membrane of specific target cells, followed by discharge to the cytoplasm of their luminal cargo containing proteins, RNAs, and DNA. Here we summarize the present knowledge about the interactions, binding and fusions of vesicles with the cell plasma membrane. The sequence initiates with dynamic interactions, during which vesicles roll over the plasma membrane, followed by the binding of specific membrane proteins to their cell receptors. Membrane binding is then converted rapidly into fusion by mechanisms analogous to those of retroviruses. Specifically, proteins of the extracellular vesicle membranes are structurally rearranged, and their hydrophobic sequences insert into the target cell plasma membrane which undergoes lipid reorganization, protein restructuring and membrane dimpling. Single fusions are not the only process of vesicle/cell interactions. Upon intracellular reassembly of their luminal cargoes, vesicles can be regenerated, released and fused horizontally to other target cells. Fusions of extracellular vesicles are relevant also for specific therapy processes, now intensely investigated.Entities:
Keywords: discharge of luminal cargoes; ectosomes; exosomes; extracellular vesicles (EVs); multivesicular bodies (MVBs); plasma membrane; receptors; retroviral-type membrane fusions; vesicle cargo
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27517914 PMCID: PMC5000693 DOI: 10.3390/ijms17081296
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Optical tweezer-induced direct interaction of a vesicle (EV) with the surface of a microglial target cell. The figure illustrates the interaction and binding events occurring in a cultured microglial cell interacting with a single EV (marked by arrows) trapped by optical tweezers (marked by triangles) (A) and then transferred near the periphery of the cell surface (B); Upon its release, the EV exhibited a number of oscillations ()F)), after which it started sliding over the cell surface towards the central area of the cell (C,D); After reaching a critical site of the cell surface, the EV sliding decreased markedly (E); (F) reports the whole pathway (blue area) followed by the EV, illustrated by the separate steps of (C–E). Scale bar in A = 5 µm. The morphological images are illustrated also quantitatively in (G) and (H). Notice in G the initial oscillations reported also by the cell in (F); in (H) the strong reduction of the speed, evident after approximately 400 s. Such a reduction is probably due to the receptor binding that anticipates the EV/cell fusion, occurring at the surface or upon internalization into endosomes. Modified with permission from Reference [10].
Figure 2Illustration of the binding and ensuing fusion of an EV to the plasma membrane of its target cell. The EVs (such as the one shown in Figure 1) include, at their surface, domains of the trans-membrane proteins syncytins. (A) An EV with syncytin-2 is approaching a target cell which, in the plasma membrane, exhibits the syncytin 2-specific receptor, HFSD2a; (B) The EV protein and its receptor appear bound to each other; Hydrophobic loops of the vesicle protein begin to deepen into the plasma membrane, contributing to its molecular re-arrangement, with protein depletion of its external layer (C); This is followed by the hemifusion of the EV membrane with the cell target plasma membrane (D); followed by the re-organization of the two, closely attached membranes, with their dissolution at the fusion site (E); The fusion induced the ensuing insertion of the EV membrane in the target plasma membrane, and the release to the cytoplasm of the luminal cargo molecules: proteins, RNAs and small DNA sequences (F).