| Literature DB >> 29089870 |
Jennifer Ariazi1, Andrew Benowitz1, Vern De Biasi1, Monique L Den Boer2, Stephanie Cherqui3, Haifeng Cui1, Nathalie Douillet4, Eliseo A Eugenin5,6, David Favre7, Spencer Goodman3, Karine Gousset8, Dorit Hanein9, David I Israel10, Shunsuke Kimura11, Robert B Kirkpatrick1, Nastaran Kuhn12, Claire Jeong13, Emil Lou14, Robbie Mailliard15, Stephen Maio13, George Okafo4, Matthias Osswald16,17, Jennifer Pasquier18, Roel Polak2, Gabriele Pradel19, Bob de Rooij2, Peter Schaeffer1, Vytenis A Skeberdis20, Ian F Smith21, Ahmad Tanveer22, Niels Volkmann9, Zhenhua Wu1, Chiara Zurzolo23.
Abstract
Cell-to-cell communication is essential for the organization, coordination, and development of cellular networks and multi-cellular systems. Intercellular communication is mediated by soluble factors (including growth factors, neurotransmitters, and cytokines/chemokines), gap junctions, exosomes and recently described tunneling nanotubes (TNTs). It is unknown whether a combination of these communication mechanisms such as TNTs and gap junctions may be important, but further research is required. TNTs are long cytoplasmic bridges that enable long-range, directed communication between connected cells. The proposed functions of TNTs are diverse and not well understood but have been shown to include the cell-to-cell transfer of vesicles, organelles, electrical stimuli and small molecules. However, the exact role of TNTs and gap junctions for intercellular communication and their impact on disease is still uncertain and thus, the subject of much debate. The combined data from numerous laboratories indicate that some TNT mediate a long-range gap junctional communication to coordinate metabolism and signaling, in relation to infectious, genetic, metabolic, cancer, and age-related diseases. This review aims to describe the current knowledge, challenges and future perspectives to characterize and explore this new intercellular communication system and to design TNT-based therapeutic strategies.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer; cancer; gap junctions; inflammation; reactivation
Year: 2017 PMID: 29089870 PMCID: PMC5651011 DOI: 10.3389/fnmol.2017.00333
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Mol Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5099 Impact factor: 6.261
Figure 1Schematic of TNT formation and the potential role of gap junction channels during long rage communication. As described in the text, TNT have at least 3 different stages, including formation, stabilization, and the transport of the cargo. The last one is associated with several different roles in disease including viral spreading, chemoresistance, and disease dissemination as well as an energy associated survival, genetic disease rescue and stress survival. TNT formation is triggered by inflammation, infection, toxicity, in several disease, and embryogenesis/morphogenesis. Some of the proteins involved in the formation of TNT are actin, Myosin Va and X, synaptophysin, Cx43, and M-sec. Following the formation of the TNT process, there are at least 2 different types of tubes, a synaptic and open-ended process. The formation of these long rage TNT enable the connected cells to share multiple proteins and lipids.
Open questions in the area of TNT and gap junctions.
| Pathophysiological function of TNTs | Why are TNTs induced in disease? |
Hijacking development and/or an evolutionary response Stress induction Specificity in cargo delivery—energy conservation Exchange of genetic material to support disease or rescue damage cells from cell death |
| Translational relevance of TNTs in disease | TNTs are thought to play a role in disease—which disease(s)? |
Diseases include cancer, neurodegenerative disorders, tau related diseases, HIV, lysosomal disorders, inflammation, parasitic infections (Malaria) |
| What role do TNTs play is disease? |
Promoting the disease (e.g., spread of virus, protein aggregates), mitochondria between cancer cells (chemo-resistance) Rescuing the cell function (e.g., lysosomal and mitochondrial transfer to defective cells) | |
| Elucidating Normal Physiologic functions of TNTs |
Facilitating cell contact during development (e.g., cytonemes) Promoting cell communication (e.g., Signaling) between distant cells Immune response and organelle exchange mechanisms Function in stem cell biology and tissue repair Diverse heterogeneity of TNTs (phenotype/functions/disease/health) Proven importance/roles of TNTs for immune response Multi-functional cargo (“FedEx”-like) | |
| What are the key learnings |
Cell structure is important for spread/progression of the disease by transferring, e.g., infectious agents between cells and for cell-to-cell communication, e.g., during development, tissue regeneration Potential therapeutic target to block disease progression TNT formation during development (e.g., CNS), pathological events (pathogens, tumor cells, misfolded/aggregated/stress protein), during regeneration process (stroke), in inflammation/immune response and drug delivery Importance of identifying mechanism of actin/motors that drive TNTs Elevating research beyond Importance of examining heterotypic TNT interactions, e.g., cancer-to-stem cells, cancer/stroma To examine the immense heterogeneity of definition of TNTs | |
| Cellular mechanisms of TNTs | What is known about TNT cell biology? |
Strong evidence of TNT formation Intercellular communication /signaling/cargo/dyes Inducible (infection/inflammation) A Large variety of cells capable of TNT formation Some evidence of TNT formation Evidence that M-sec, myosins, F-actin, and calcium transfer are involved Shaking/physical disruption blocks TNT formation Gap junctions may play a role in TNT connecting to receiving cells (Focus if this review) |
| What is the overlap, and what are the potential differences, of TNT biology in normal cells vs. in disease, and between different diseases? |
Differences—induction of TNT seems to be associated with “diseased” cells The direction of cargo communication Cell types/microenvironment (tumor/inflammation) In diseased cells, F-actin polymerization is increased. | |
| How does a donor cell “decide” what organelles, molecules or signals transfer through TNTs? |
Key factors include: ◦ Variety of TNTs ◦ Different triggering factors (pathogen, metabolic stress, e.g., reactive oxygen species) ◦ Selectivity of organelles and direction of travel ◦ Uni-/bi-directional depends on cell type &/or cargo Stress response Preferential transfer of mitochondria Virus hijack TNTs | |
| TNT research has advanced over the last 10 years—what are the key focus areas to advance this science? |
Mechanism of TNT formation—trigger, direction, cargo/content, structure, response Better characterization—different types of TNTs, types of cells able to make TNTs Develop/test TNT blockade strategies and TNT induction mechanism Delineate relationship between TNTs and inflammation/immune response stromal The following items are needed: ◦ Chemical tools ◦ Common mechanism of transfer ◦ Selectivity ◦ A TNT biomarker ◦ Cargo identification Regulation and induction/suppression Accept TNT heterogeneity (no simple narrow definition to make this science grow) Technology hurdles: Need higher resolution microscopy (e.g., EM, cryoEM, organelle level resolution, identifying cellular structure “signatures”) Collaboration with medicinal chemists to synthesize inhibitors of key TNT-drivers (e.g., M-sec) Proteomics to identify TNTs and their contents Targeted drug delivery via TNTs (e.g., siRNA) “How does the TNT know where to go?” cell sensing mechanisms? Translational relevance: identify strategic approaches that are disease specific Standardization of terminology Broader definition, including subtype descriptors Better, specific markers → enable 3D culture experiments, TNT biochemistry—reconstitute in a cell-free system |