| Literature DB >> 27796607 |
Sean M Davidson1, Kaloyan Takov2, Derek M Yellon2.
Abstract
Most, if not all, cells of the cardiovascular system secrete small, lipid bilayer vesicles called exosomes. Despite technical challenges in their purification and analysis, exosomes from various sources have been shown to be powerfully cardioprotective. Indeed, it is possible that much of the so-called "paracrine" benefit in cardiovascular function obtained by stem cell therapy can be replicated by the injection of exosomes produced by stem cells. However, exosomes purified from plasma appear to be just as capable of activating cardioprotective pathways. We discuss the potential roles of endogenous exosomes in the cardiovascular system, how this is perturbed in cardiovascular disease, and evaluate their potential as therapeutic agents to protect the heart.Entities:
Keywords: Cardioprotection; Exosomes; Microparticles; Microvesicles; Stem cells
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 27796607 PMCID: PMC5346599 DOI: 10.1007/s10557-016-6698-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cardiovasc Drugs Ther ISSN: 0920-3206 Impact factor: 3.727
Fig. 1a Fusion of multivesicular endosomes with the plasma membrane of sheep reticulocytes and their release by exocytosis as exosomes. The gold-labelled antibodies against transferrin receptors bind to 50-nm vesicles which are inside openings of 300–800 nm in diameter. Reprinted with permission from Pan et al. [3]. b, c Cryo-electron microscopy of EVs from pure plasma. Spherical EVs embedded in a thin film of frozen platelet-free plasma. EV diameters are 185 nm in (b) and 45 nm and 60 nm in (c). The lipid bilayer at the periphery of EVs is resolved in two dark lines 4 nm apart (arrow in b). The granular aspect of the background is due to the high protein content of plasma. Scale bars: 100 nm. Reprinted with permission from [14]. d Transmission electron microscopy of exosome enriched from rat plasma by differential ultracentrifugation. Scale bar: 100 nm. e Size distribution exosome produced by primary adult rat cardiomyocytes as determined by nanoparticle tracking analysis
Calculation of the number of proteins per a typical exosome and cell
| Spherical exosome | Cube-shaped cell | |
|---|---|---|
| Diameter / length | 100 nm | 15 μm |
| Volume | 0.0005 μm3 | 3375 μm3 |
| Density | 1.15 g/ml | 1.03 g/ml |
| Mass (volume x density) | 6.0 × 10−7 ng | 3.48 ng |
| Mass of protein (20 % of totala) | 1.2 × 10−7 ng | 0.70 ng |
| Number of proteinsa,b | 1390 | 8.0 × 109 |
| Number of exosomes/cells required for 1 μg of protein | 8.3 × 109 | 1430 |
aAssumptions made are that protein accounts for 20 % of the total exosome mass and that the average protein mass is 52 kDa, as has been determined to be the case for eukaryotic cells [60]
bNumber of proteins = mass of proteins / 52,000 x Avogadro’s constant
Roles of EVs released from the cells of the cardiovascular system
| Cell/organ of the vesicular origin | Source | Type of EVs | Cargo mediator | Function | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| A: | |||||
| Endothelial cells | HUVECs, mouse H5V cell line | Microvesicles, exosomes | miRNA-143, miRNA-145 | Endothelial cells subjected to shear stress or overexpressing Krüppel-like Factor 2 (activated by shear stress) have increased expression of miRNA-143 and miRNA-145 which are secreted in the extracellular vesicle fraction and transferred to smooth muscle cells. This was atheroprotective in a mouse model. Procedure for microvesicle isolation followed, although authors noted that majority of vesicles are reminiscent of exosomes. | [ |
| Endothelial cells | Human microvascular endothelial cell line | Exosomes | miRNA-214 | Increased migration and tube formation of recipient endothelial cells abolished by depletion of miRNA-214 by antagomir. In mice in vivo angiogenesis was increased in implanted matrigel plugs loaded with endothelial cell-derived exosomes but not in plugs loaded with exosomes isolated from antagomir-treated endothelial cells. | [ |
| Cardiomyocytes | HL-1 cell line | Exosomes | Not determined | Growth factor (TGF-β2, PDGF-BB) treatment affected messenger RNA contents of exosomes secreted by cardiomyocytes. No function reported. | [ |
| Cardiomyocytes | Rat (neonatal) | Exosomes | GLUT1, GLUT4 | Glucose deprivation of neonatal rat cardiomyocytes increased production of exosomes carrying GLUT1 and GLUT4 transporters which were transferred to rat cardiac microvascular endothelial cells to stimulate uptake of glucose and glycolysis. | [ |
| Cardiomyocytes | H9C2 cell line | Exosomes | Not determined | Glucose deprivation increases production of exosomes in cardiomyocytes which can be transferred to HUVECs and induce transcriptional changes, proliferation and tube formation in vitro. Differential protein and miRNA content demonstrated under normal conditions or glucose deprivation which may account for these effects. | [ |
| Platelets | Human | Microparticles | Lipid growth factors | Increased survival, proliferation and migration of HUVECs reduced by treatment with activated charcoal suggesting involvement of lipid growth factor mediators. | [ |
| Platelets | Human | Microparticles | VEGF, bFGF, PDGF, heparanase | Stimulation of sprouting angiogenesis in a rat aortic ring model. Increased migration of endothelial cells through a matrigel membrane. Induction of angiogenesis in vivo in implanted agarose beads containing platelet microparticles. Induction of revascularisation after chronic myocardial infarction in rats. | [ |
| Platelets | Human | Microparticles | CXCR4 | Increased expression of mature endothelial cell markers, adhesion and migration of angiogenic early outgrowth cells by increase in CXCR4. Reduction of neointima formation after wire injury in mice in vivo. | [ |
| Blood plasma/unknown cell type | Rat, human | Exosomes | HSP70 | Protection against myocardial ischaemia-reperfusion injury in vitro (isolated cardiomyocytes), ex vivo (Langendorff heart preparation) and in vivo in rats by HSP70/TLR-4-mediated activation of ERK/p38 pathway in cardiomyocytes. | [ |
| Reticulocytes | Rat [ | Exosomes | Transferring receptors | Disposal of transferrin receptors needed for maturation of reticulocytes. | [ |
| B: | |||||
| Blood plasma, lungs | Mice (pulmonary arterial hypertension) | Exosomes | Differential miRNA profile in healthy and diseased animals | Exosomes isolated from blood plasma or lungs of mice with pulmonary arterial hypertension induce right ventricular hypertrophy and remodelling of the pulmonary vasculature in recipient healthy mice. | [ |
| Blood plasma, endothelial progenitor cells | Human | Microvesicles | miRNA-126/VEGFR2 | Reduction of endothelial progenitor cell migration, increased apoptosis and increased production of ROS upon treatment with blood plasma-derived or endothelial progenitor cell-derived microvesicles from patients with uncontrolled diabetes. Microvesicles from healthy controls had opposite effects. Effects attributed to decreased levels of miRNA-126 and VEGFR2 in endothelial progenitor cells in uncontrolled diabetes. | [ |
| Blood plasma (endothelial origin) | Human | Microparticles | N/A | Endothelial microparticles with procoagulant potential were elevated in patients with unstable angina and myocardial infarction. No function reported. | [ |
| Platelets, erythrocytes, endothelial cells | Human | Microparticles | N/A | Rise in platelet, erythrocyte and endothelial cell microparticles with procoagulant potential after sympathomimetic stress echocardiogram in healthy but not vascular disease patients. No function identified. | [ |
| Pericytes, endothelial cells | Human | Exosomes | Not determined | Pericytes stimulated with CoCl2 induce pro-angiogenic response in endothelial cell as shown in would healing and spinal cord tissue angiogenesis assays. These pro-angiogenic effects were ameliorated upon pharmacological inhibition of exosome secretion. | [ |
| Vascular smooth muscle cells | Human | Exosomes / matrix vesicles | Calcium/phosphate deposits | Vascular smooth muscle cell-derived matrix vesicles (identified as exosomes) shown to carry mineral deposits. Calcifying conditions increased exosome production of vascular smooth muscle cells. Chronic kidney disease and atherosclerotic patients shown to have high calcifying exosome content in arteries. | [ |
| Cardiomyocytes | Healthy and Goto-Kakizaki diabetic rats | Exosomes | miRNA-320 | Inhibition of proliferation and migration of mouse cardiac endothelial cells upon incubation with exosomes secreted by Goto-Kakizaki (GK) rat cardiomyocytes. Exosomes isolated from healthy Wistar rats had opposite effects. miRNA-320 was upregulated in GK rats exosomes and delivered to endothelial cells inhibiting proangiogenic target genes. | [ |
Cardioprotection by cardiac-, plasma- and stem-cell-derived exosomes
| Source of exosomes | Protection observed | Mechanism | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cardiac endothelial cells | Improved ejection fraction in mice after MI | Delivery of miR-126 and miR-210 to CPCs, activating prosurvival kinases and inducing a glycolytic switch | [ |
| Human or rat plasma | Cardioprotection | Exosomal HSP70 activating MAPK/ERK1/2 signalling via TLR4 | [ |
| CD34+ve haematopoietic stem cells | Angiogenic activity both in vitro and in vivo | Not determined | [ |
| Embryonic stem cells (ESCs) | Enhanced neovascularization, cardiomyocyte survival, and reduced fibrosis post MI | delivery of miR-294 to c-kit+ve cardiac progenitor cells | [ |
| Cardiac progenitor cells (CPCs) | Stimulate the migration of endothelial cells in vitro | Matrix metalloproteinases | [ |
| Cardiac progenitor cells (CPCs) | Reduced apoptosis, enhanced angiogenesis, improved ejection fraction in rat MI | Potentially via delivery of miR-210, miR-132, and miR-146a-3p | [ |
| Cardiospheres (CSp-EMVs) | Primed fibroblasts, which stimulated angiogenesis and cardioprotection when injected in MI | Increased secretion of the SDF-1α and VEGF | [ |
| Cardiosphere-derived cells (CDCs) | Improved cardiac function in murine MI inhibiting apoptosis and promoting proliferation of cardiomyocytes, while enhancing angiogenesis | Potentially via delivery of miR-146a | [ |
| Cardiosphere-derived cells (CDCs) | Decrease apoptosis and fibrosis and improved function in a doxorubicin-induced cardiomyopathy | Not determined | [ |
| Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) | Reduced infarct size and improved recovery in a mouse MI | Akt and GSK-3β signalling pathways | [ |