| Literature DB >> 30098600 |
Chuchu Shao1,2, Fengming Yang2, Suyu Miao3, Weitao Liu4, Chaoshan Wang4, Yongqian Shu5,6, Hua Shen7,8.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Hypoxia is a major regulator of angiogenesis and always influences the release of exosomes in various types of tumors. The present review aimed to assess the role of hypoxia-induced exosomes in the tumor biology.Entities:
Keywords: Cancer; Exosome; Extracellular vesicles; Hypoxia
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30098600 PMCID: PMC6087002 DOI: 10.1186/s12943-018-0869-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Cancer ISSN: 1476-4598 Impact factor: 27.401
Fig. 1Hypoxic-induced exosomes promote angiogenesis in multiple cancers. Under chronic hypoxic conditions, cancer cells secrete higher levels of exosomes. The upregulated exosomal ncRNAs and specific proteins induced by hypoxia are taken up by the surrounding endothelial cells, resulting in the accelerated angiogenesis
Hypoxia-induced exosomes involved in cancer biology
| Regulatory factors | Cancer types | Response to hypoxia | Biological function | Mechanism | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Exosomal miR-135b | Multiple myeloma | Increased | Increase angiogenesis | Downregulates its target FIH-1 | [ |
| Exosomal miR-23a | Lung cancer | Increased | Increase angiogenesis and migration | Inhibition of PHD1, PHD2 and ZO-1 | [ |
| Exosomal miR-210 | Leukemia | Increased | Increase angiogenesis | Inhibits the expression of Ephrin A3 | [ |
| Exosomal miR-494 | Non-small cell lung cancer | Increased | Increase angiogenesis | Downregulates PTEN and activates Akt/eNOS pathway in ECs | [ |
| Exosomal miR-21 | Oral squamous cell carcinoma | Increased | Promote migration and invasion | Downregulate a pool of genes and induces EMT of these cells. | [ |
| Exosomal miR-940 | Epithelial ovarian cancer | Increased | Regulate immune response | Induces macrophages to express higher levels of the M2-type markers CD163 and CD206 | [ |
| Exosomal miR24-3p | Nasopharyngeal carcinoma | Increased | Regulate immune response | Not mentioned | [ |
| Exosomal miR-210 | Hypoxic cancer | Increased | Increase angiogenesis | Inhibits the expression of Ephrin A3 and PTP1B | [ |
| Exosomal linc-UCA1 | Bladder cancer | Increased | Promote migration and invasion | Promotes EMT | [ |
| Exosomal linc-RoR | Hepatocellular cancer | Increased | Promote migration and invasion | Not mentioned | [ |
| Exosomal proteins | Prostate cancer | Increased | Promote migration and invasion | Not mentioned | [ |
| Exosomal CA9 | Renal cell carcinoma | Increased | Increase angiogenesis | Upregulates its target MMP2 | [ |
| Exosomal TF | Glioblastoma multiforme | Increased | Increase angiogenesis | Enhances TF/VIIa-mediated PAR-2 activation and activates endothelial cells | [ |
| Exosomal Wnt4 | Colorectal cancer | Increased | Increase angiogenesis | Increases β-catenin nuclear translocation in endothelial cells | [ |
| Exosomal MMP13 | Nasopharyngeal carcinoma | Increased | Promote migration and invasion | Not mentioned | [ |
| Exosomal HIF1α | Nasopharyngeal carcinoma | Increased | Promote migration and invasion | Promotes EMT | [ |
| Exosomal TGF-β1 and miR23a | Hypoxic cancer | Increased | Regulate immune response | TGF-β1 downregulates NKG2D and miR23a directly targets CD107a | [ |
Fig. 2Exosomes and microvesicles derived from hypoxic tumors are involved in the immune response of tumor microenvironment, including regulation of T-cell proliferation, inhibition of NK cells, activation of macrophages, and promotion of their polarization