| Literature DB >> 28730141 |
Abir Mondal1, Divya Kumari Singh1, Suchismita Panda1, Anjali Shiras1.
Abstract
Diffuse gliomas are lethal tumors of the central nervous system (CNS) characterized by infiltrative growth, aggressive nature, and therapeutic resistance. The recent 2016 WHO classification for CNS tumors categorizes diffuse glioma into two major types that include IDH wild-type glioblastoma, which is the predominant type and IDH-mutant glioblastoma, which is less common and displays better prognosis. Recent studies suggest presence of a distinct cell population with stem cell features termed as glioma stem cells (GSCs) to be causal in driving tumor growth in glioblastoma. The presence of a stem and progenitor population possibly makes glioblastoma highly heterogeneous. Significantly, tumor growth is driven by interaction of cells residing within the tumor with the surrounding milieu termed as the tumor microenvironment. It comprises of various cell types such as endothelial cells, secreted factors, and the surrounding extracellular matrix, which altogether help perpetuate the proliferation of GSCs. One of the important mediators critical to the cross talk is extracellular vesicles (EVs). These nano-sized vesicles play important roles in intercellular communication by transporting bioactive molecules into the surrounding milieu, thereby altering cellular functions and/or reprogramming recipient cells. With the growing information on the contribution of EVs in modulation of the tumor microenvironment, it is important to determine their role in both supporting as well as promoting tumor growth in glioma. In this review, we provide a comprehensive overview of the role of EVs in tumor progression and glioma pathogenesis.Entities:
Keywords: angiogenesis; extracellular vesicles; glioblastoma; microRNAs; microenvironment
Year: 2017 PMID: 28730141 PMCID: PMC5498789 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2017.00144
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Composition of putative biomolecules in glioblastoma-derived EVs and their respective functions.
| Physiological and pathophysiological functions | Biomolecules exported by extracellular vesicles | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tumor growth, metabolism, invasion, and metastasis | Proteins | EGFRvIII | ( |
| Trk β | ( | ||
| MMPs, PDGFs, caveolin 1, lysyl oxidase, IL-8 | ( | ||
| Annexin A2 | ( | ||
| CLIC1 | ( | ||
| Semaphorin 3A | ( | ||
| mRNAs | EGFR | ( | |
| Podoplanin | ( | ||
| Mutant IDH1 | ( | ||
| ncRNAs | miR-15b, 16, 19b, 21, 26a, 92 | ( | |
| miR-1 | ( | ||
| miR-27b, 451, 222, 135b, 30e, 451 | ( | ||
| Immune suppression | Proteins | TGF-β | ( |
| IL-6 | ( | ||
| Angiogenesis | Proteins | Angiogenin, IL-VEGF, and tissue factor | ( |
| ncRNAs | miR-19b | ( | |
| Linc-POU3F3 | ( | ||
| Therapy resistance | Proteins | Trk β | ( |
| IL-6 | ( | ||
| mRNAs | MGMT, APNG, EGFR, CD63, ERCC1 | ( | |
| TIMP1, TIMP2 | ( | ||
| ncRNAs | miR-21 | ( | |
| miR-100 | ( | ||
| miR-221 | ( | ||
| Biomolecules with unknown functions | ncRNAs | miR-27a, 92, 93, 320, 20 | ( |
| RNU6, miR-483-5p, 574-3p, 197, 484, 146a, 223 | ( | ||
| miR-451a, 4301, 5096, 3676-5p, 4454, 1303, 1273a, 619, 448, 1246, 4792, 5095, 1273g, 4256, 4255, 5100, 1285-1, 1269b, 4500, 1273d, 4443 let-7b, 9a, 30a, 30d, 30b, 22, 125a, 25, 29a, 4301, 27b, 23b, 5096, 3676, 374b, 339, 191, 4454 | ( | ||
| miR-24, 103, 125 | ( | ||
| DNA | Mitochondrial DNA | ( | |
| Diagnostic marker | gDNA | IDH1G395AgDNA | ( |
mRNA, messenger RNA; ncRNA, non-coding RNA; gDNA, genomic DNA; miR, microRNA.
Figure 1(i) Biogenesis and secretion of extracellular vesicles (EVs) such as MVs and exosomes. Sorting of cargo molecules in multivesicular bodies (MVBs) occur in an endosomal sorting complex required for transport (ESCRT)-dependent manner. Exosomes are of endosomal origin and their secretion is mediated by Rab GTPase family proteins and the Wnt5a-Ca++ non-canonical pathway. In an alternative pathway, the release of MVs is governed by ADP-ribosylation factor 6 (ARF6) and membrane lipid microdomains. (ii) Uptake of EVs by recipient cells or binding of surface ligands of EVs to recipient cells is followed by downstream molecular cascades resulting in processes like angiogenesis, therapy resistance, immune modulation, and metabolic reprogramming, (A) angiogenesis; tumor-derived EVs modulate the formation of blood vessels, which supports glioma progression, (B) therapy resistance; exosomes or MVs carry cytokines, which may further activate STAT3 protein via cytokine receptors and ultimately leads to proneural–mesenchymal transition (PMT) and a radiation-resistant phenotype of glioma (56). Activation of STAT3 signaling also promotes temozolomide resistance of glioma (57). (C) Immune modulation; glioma-derived exosomes are able to inactivate immune responses by inhibiting T-cell maturation and changes in phenotypes of monocytes and (D) metabolic reprogramming; possible through transfer of metabolic enzymes to tumor-associated cells via EVs and in turn tumor cells acquire energy and nutrients, which support glioma growth.