| Literature DB >> 29951374 |
Matteo Giulietti1, Matteo Santoni2, Alessia Cimadamore3, Francesco Carrozza4, Francesco Piva1, Liang Cheng5, Antonio Lopez-Beltran6, Marina Scarpelli3, Nicola Battelli2, Rodolfo Montironi3.
Abstract
Tumor microenvironment constitutes a complex network in which tumor cells communicate among them and with stromal and immune cells. It has been shown that cancer cells are able to exchange genetic materials through small extracellular vesicles (EVs), a heterogeneous group of vesicles with different size and shape, cargo content, and function. The importance to investigate populations of circulating EVs would be of great importance as prostate cancer (PCa) biomarkers. In several neoplasms as well as in PCa, nanometer-sized EVs of endosomal origin are implicated in supporting tumor growth and metastatic spread by both altering local stroma cells and creating a protumor environment that favors the formation of pre-metastatic niches. Several techniques are applicable for the isolation and analysis of PCa-derived small EVs and are illustrated in this article. Due to the high sensitivity and specificity of these techniques, small EVs have become ideal candidates for early diagnosis. Moreover, we discuss the role of small EVs during PCa carcinogenesis, as well as in modulating the development of drug resistance to hormonal therapy and chemotherapy, thus underlining the potential of EV-tailored strategies in PCa patients.Entities:
Keywords: drug resistance; prostate cancer; small extracellular vesicles; tumor biomarkers; tumor microenvironment
Year: 2018 PMID: 29951374 PMCID: PMC6008382 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2018.00221
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Overview of various small extracellular vesicles (EVs) isolation techniques.
| Isolation method | Principle | Processing time | Advantages | Disadvantages | Purity degree | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ultracentrifugation | Sedimentation rates (depending on size and shape) | 3–16 h | Easy to use, high yields | High equipment cost, time-consuming, low portability, not scalable, high-speed centrifugation may induce vesicle disruption | Low: contamination by cell debris, large vesicles, vesicle aggregates, and protein complexes | ( |
| Density gradient separation | Density | 20–24 h | Adequate grade of purity | Laborious and time-consuming, low portability, not scalable | Medium: contamination by high-density lipoprotein and other vesicles | ( |
| Ultrafiltration | Size | 1–6 h | Fast, good portability, useful for urine concentration | High-speed centrifugation may induce vesicle disruption, membrane filter clogging, small EVs loss, not scalable | Low: protein co-isolation | ( |
| Size-exclusion chromatography | Size | 6–12 h | Gravity flow preserves small EVs integrity, high reproducibility | Not scalable, time-consuming | High | ( |
| Small EVs precipitation | Polymer mixtures that alter the solubility of small EVs | 30 min–2 h | Fast, easy to use, no specialized equipment required, large and scalable sample capacity | Low purity, not recommended if coupled with mass spectrometry | Low: contamination by protein aggregates and other vesicles | ( |
| Immunoaffinity capture | Presence of small EVs’ surface antigens | 16–20 h | Unique method for the isolation of specific small EVs | High reagent cost, low capacity, low yields, time-consuming | Very high | ( |
Figure 1Functions exerted by small extracellular vesicles (EVs) in prostate cancer (PCa) microenvironment and their clinical implications.