| Literature DB >> 30519245 |
Diane Beuzelin1, Bertrand Kaeffer1.
Abstract
Exosomes are small membrane vesicles of 30-150 nm, members of the extracellular vesicle family and secreted by various cell types. Different studies describe specific microRNA (miRNA) with altered expression in serum and/or plasma of patients suffering from diabetes or metabolic syndrome. Diabetic cardiomyocyte-derived exosomes loaded with miRNAs like miR-320-3p (or 320a) have been shown regulating angiogenesis on endothelial cell cultures. Insufficient myocardial angiogenesis is the major manifestation of diabetes-caused ischemic cardiovascular disease. Studies on transfer of functional microRNAs between mouse dendritic cells via exosomes have shown that some miRNAs (miR-320-3p, 29b-3p, 7a-5p) are distributed in immature and mature exosomes. Among these miRNAs, miR-320-3p is better known in epigenetics for silencing polr3d gene by binding to its promoter in Human Embryonic Kidney-293 cells. Moreover, quantitative and stoichiometric analysis of the microRNA content of exosomes highlights the lack of reliable natural source of such particles loaded with miRNA opening the need for tailoring exosomes or nanoparticles delivering efficiently miRNA intimately linked to immunity, metabolism and epigenetics in target cells. However, loading of extracellular mature miRNA into recipient cells comes with a cost by at least impeding dynamic localization of miRNAs in nucleoli or inefficient miRNA delivery due to rapid recycling by exonucleases. All these works are calling for the design of new biomimetic vehicles and in vivo assessment of miRNA functionality when delivered by natural or biomimetic nanoparticles in order to control metabolic diseases from infancy to adulthood.Entities:
Keywords: breast milk; epigenetics; metabolic diseases; nanoparticle; neonate
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30519245 PMCID: PMC6258775 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2018.02711
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1Sources of exosomes and design of biomimetic vehicles. Purposes of inoculation routes are (1) minimizing invasiveness, (2) targeting cell-specific (i. e., gut or beta pancreatic cells) or tissue-specific delivery (i. e., brain). (A) Engineered cells for producing exosomes. (B) Nanoliposomes produced from living cells. (C) Lipid nanoparticles & Niosomes (Diameter between 10–100 nm, made with non-ionic surfactants including alkyl esters, ethers, and amides.). Most applications are targeting T lymphocytes or dendritic cells. Beside these attempts to mimic more or less closely natural exosomes, amphiphilic lipids made of aminoglycosides rings (D) are also used to deliver nucleic acid in target cells, the main application being vaccination. Mechanism of cytosol delivery has been studied under electron microscopy (23). Moreover, oral inoculation opens the possibility to target digestive epithelial cells (24). Note that blood-brain barrier at the plexus choroid can relay signal received from circulating exosomes by producing de novo exosomes liberated in brain area (25). A cellular target could be pancreatic beta-cells, the cell surface proteome has been described (26) opening the way to specifically address biodesigned nanoparticles loaded with miRNAs. Patients undergoing bariatric surgery are frequently recovering from type-2 diabetes, strongly suggesting that gastrointestinal epithelium is crucial in such pathology and opening the way for treating metabolic diseases by oral delivery of drugs (27).
Known molecular targets of miR-320-3p and relation with exosomes in rodent models.
| Cardiomyocyte cultures of Goto-Kakizaki (GK) rats (10–11 weeks of age, male) in parallel to Wistar rats | IGF-I (proangiogenic factor) | Lower level of exosomes loaded with miR-320-3p than cardiomyocytes of GK rat | ( |
| Mouse BDM culture transfert in Dendritic Cells | Ets2 (a transcription factor required for endothelial cell survival) Hsp20 | In immature and mature exosomes Proof: Importantly, exosome-shuttle miRNAs are functional, because they repress target mRNAs of acceptor Dendritic Cells | ( |
| KKAy diabetic mice | Diabetic mice treated with JTXK granule show significant up-regulation of miR-320-3p (2.06-fold) and dow-regulation of miR-320-5p (0.47-fold) | N/A | ( |
| HEK-293 | Induced enrichment of Ago-1 and EZH2 at the Pol-R-3D locus leading to heterochromatinization and transcriptional gene silencing | N/A | ( |
| Human Umbilical Vein Endothelial Cells (HUVECs) | Endothelin 1 (ET-1) | N/A | ( |
| Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor (VEGF) | |||
| Fibronectin (FN) | |||
| Rat under Chronic Mild Stress | Potential involvement in SERT regulation in Mesocortical Circuit and Its Interplay with Serotonin Transporter Define Resilient Rats in the Chronic Mild Stress | N/A | ( |
The miR-320 family contains 5 members in human (a, b, c, d, e) all from 3p. Nomenclature is somewhat confusing. The hsa-miR-320-3p is used here because of sequence identity in rat (MIMAT0000903) and mouse (MIMAT0000666). In human it is mainly known as 320a (5′-AAAAGCUGGGUUGAGAGGGCGA-3′; MIMAT0000510). The 18 nucleosides in 5′ are identical to all family and constitute e form; the 3′ end of b is “GCAA,” of c “GU” and of d “A.” This miRNA does not harbor hexanucleotide element putatively facilitating addressing to nucleus (.