| Literature DB >> 30815248 |
Yuan Zhang1, Yunfeng Liu2, Haiying Liu2, Wai Ho Tang1.
Abstract
Exosomes are nano-sized biovesicles released into surrounding body fluids upon fusion of multivesicular bodies and the plasma membrane. They were shown to carry cell-specific cargos of proteins, lipids, and genetic materials, and can be selectively taken up by neighboring or distant cells far from their release, reprogramming the recipient cells upon their bioactive compounds. Therefore, the regulated formation of exosomes, specific makeup of their cargo, cell-targeting specificity are of immense biological interest considering extremely high potential of exosomes as non-invasive diagnostic biomarkers, as well as therapeutic nanocarriers. In present review, we outline and discuss recent progress in the elucidation of the regulatory mechanisms of exosome biogenesis, the molecular composition of exosomes, and technologies used in exosome research. Furthermore, we focus on the potential use of exosomes as valuable diagnostic and prognostic biomarkers for their cell-lineage and state-specific contents, and possibilities as therapeutic vehicles for drug and gene delivery. Exosome research is now in its infancy, in-depth understanding of subcellular components and mechanisms involved in exosome formation and specific cell-targeting will bring light on their physiological activities.Entities:
Keywords: Biogenesis; Biomarker; Exosome; Therapeutic vehicle
Year: 2019 PMID: 30815248 PMCID: PMC6377728 DOI: 10.1186/s13578-019-0282-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Biosci ISSN: 2045-3701 Impact factor: 7.133
Characteristics of main extracellular vesicles
| Feature | Exosome | Apoptotic body | MV |
|---|---|---|---|
| Size | Homologous | Heterogeneous | Heterogeneous |
| Markers | Membrane impermeable (PI negative) | Membrane permeable (PI positive) | Membrane impermeable (PI negative) |
| Density | 1.13–1.19 g/mL | 1.16–1.28 g/mL | 1.25–1.30 g/mL |
| Contents | Protein, lipid, different RNA species, and DNA | Cytosolic content (protein, RNAs, fragmented DNA) and cellular organelles | Protein, lipid, different RNA species, and DNA |
| Determinant of controlled contents | The cellular origin and physiological state of the cell | The cellular origin and stimuli | No direct correlation |
| Lipids | A major sorting of lipidic molecules from the parental cells (include BMP) | Characterized by phosphatidylserine externalization | The lipid contents are primarily derived from plasma membrane, and resemble the parental cells (without BMP) |
| Origin | Multivesicular bodies fusion with plasmatic membrane | Cellular debris, plasma membrane blebbing during cell apoptosis | Direct outward budding or blebbing from the plasma membrane |
| Mechanism of release | Constitutive or inducible, depending on the cell type of origin | Rho-associated kinase I and myosin ATPase activity | Relocation of phospholipids to the outer membrane, cytoskeleton rearrangements, generation of membrane curvature, and vesicle release |
| Detection methods | Electron microscopy, Western blot for exosome enriched markers | Flow cytometry, electron microscopy, | Flow cytometry, electron microscopy |
| Isolation methods | Ultracentrifugation (100,000–200,000× | Ultracentrifugation (10,000–20,000× | No standardized methods |
| Size determination and quantification | Dynamic light scattering | ||
| References | [ | [ | [ |
MV Microvesicle, BMP bone morphogenetic protein, PI propidium iodide
Common protein components of exosomes
| Protein category and description | Examples |
|---|---|
| Tetraspanins | CD9, CD63, CD81, CD82, CD37, CD53 |
| Heat shock proteins (HSP) | HSP90, HSP70, HSP27, HSP60 |
| Cell adhesion | Integrins, Lactadherin, Intercellular Adhesion Molecule 1 |
| Antigen presentation | Human leukocyte antigen class I and II/peptide complexes |
| Multivesicular body Biogenesis | Tsg101, Alix, Vps, Rab proteins |
| Membrane transport | Lysosomal-associated membrane protein 1/2, CD13, PG regulatory-like protein |
| Signaling proteins | GTPase HRas, Ras-related protein, furloss, extracellular signal-regulated kinase, Src homology 2 domain phosphatase, GDP dissociation inhibitor, Syntenin-1, 14-3-3 Proteins, Transforming protein RhoA |
| Cytoskeleton components | Actins, Cofilin-1, Moesin, Myosin, Tubulins, Erzin, Radixin, Vimentin |
| Transcription and protein synthesis | Histone1, 2, 3, Ribosomal proteins, Ubiquitin, major vault protein, Complement factor 3 |
| Metabolic enzymes | Fatty acid synthase |
| Trafficking and membrane fusion | Ras-related protein 5, 7 |
| Antiapoptosis | Alix, Thioredoxine, Peroxidase |
| Growth factors and cytokine | Tumor Necrosis Factor (TNF)-α, TNF Receptors, Transforming growth factor-β |
| Death receptors | FasL, TNF-related apoptosis inducing ligand |
| Iron transport | Transferrin receptor |
| References | [ |
Lipid-related enzymes and bioactive lipids in exosomes
| lipid category and description | Lipid related enzymes | Functional effects |
|---|---|---|
| LTA4, LTB4, LTC4 | LTA4 hydrolase, LTC4 synthase | Triggering polymorphonuclear [ |
| PGE2, 15d-PGJ2 | COX-1, COX-2 | Immunosuppression, [ |
| PGE2 | PGE synthase | Inflammation [ |
| PA | PLD2, DGK | Increasing exosome production [ |
| AA, LPC | cPLA2, iPLA2 | Accounting for the membrane curvature [ |
| / | sPLA2 IIA, sPLA2 V | Prostaglandin biosynthesis [ |
| Ceramides | nSMase2 | Sorting cargo into MVBs [ |
| Cholesterol | / | Regulating exosome secretion [ |
| BMP | / | MVB formation [ |
| PS | / | Being involved in exosome fate [ |
| SM | / | Triggering calcium influx [ |
LA4, LTB4, LTC4 Leukotriene; COX-1, COX-2 cyclooxygenases; PGE2, 15d-PGJ2 prostaglandins; PLD2 phospholipase D2; DGK diglyceride kinase; PA phosphatidic acid; PLA2 phospholipases A2; cPLA2 calcium-dependent phospholipases A2; iPLA2 calcium-independent phospholipases A2; AA arachidonic acid; LPC lysophosphatidylcholine; sPLA2 IIA; V secreted phospholipases A2 IIA and V; nSMase2 neutral sphingomyelinase 2; BMP Bis(monoacylglycero)phosphate, also called LBPA; PS phosphatidylserine; SM sphingomyelin
Fig. 1The schematic diagram of pathways involved in exosome mediated cell-to-cell communication. (1) Exosomes signal recipient cells via direct surface-bound ligands. (2) Exosomes transfer activated receptors to recipient cells. (3) Exosomes may epigenetically reprogram recipient cells via delivery of functional proteins, lipids, and RNAs
Methods for exosome characterization
| Isolation methods | Procedures | Advantages | Limitations |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ultracentrifugation [ | 400× | Golden standard, obtain highly pure exosomal fraction | 1. Only valid for exosomes purified from cell conditioned medium, but not the body fluids with complex mixture of many components |
| Size exclusion (filtration [ | Filtration through a series of filters down to 100 nm pore size followed by centrifugation (100,000× | Collect exosomes away from smaller protein contaminants | Risk of impurity or fragmentation of larger vesicles under filtration pressure |
| CCM or biofluid is dissolved in the mobile phase followed by passing through the stationary phase, wherein the various constituents of the mixture travel at different speeds so as to separate | Preserves the integrity and biological activity of exosomes | 1. Deformation and breaking-up of larger vesicles, which may potentially skew results | |
| Immune affinity capture [ | Incubate CCM with specific microbeads to bind exosomes, separate exosome-bound microbeads from CCM using solid support magnet or flow cytometry | Collect exosomes with specificity | Yields are often quite low |
| ExoQuick precipitation methods [ | This precipitation solution is combined with biofluid containing exosomes and is incubated overnight at 4 °C. The mixture is then centrifuged at low speed to form a pellet containing exosomes | 1. Enable high-throughput, quantitative isolation of exosomes from low sample volumes | Co-precipitating non-vesicular contaminants, such as lipoproteins and polymer materials |
| Microfluidic technologies (ExoChip) [ | Immunoaffinity, sieving, and trapping exosomes on porous structures | Quantitative and high-throughput analysis of exosome contents with high sensitivity | Inadequate quality control and normalization across study groups, not yet in clinical use |
The advantage and disadvantage of each type of therapeutics
| Therapeutic application of exosomes | Type I | Type II | Type III |
|---|---|---|---|
| Drugs have been reported to be loaded in exosomes | Lipophilic small molecules such as antioxidant, curcumin [ | PTX [ | OVAC1C2 fusion complementary DNA [ |
| Disadvantages | Relatively low loading capacity for already numerous proteins and nucleic acids in them | The therapeutic protein maybe degraded in host cells | The drug is limited for its encoding DNA should be expressed and sorted into exosomes |
| / | Or the therapeutic protein should be incorporated into a polymer based nanocontainer before the loading into parental cells | / | |
| / | The amount of drugs loaded into exosomes is difficult to estimate for the process of loading procedure | / | |
| Advantages | Make the quantity, standardization and uniformity of exosomal drug formulations much easier | Targeting exosomes to the disease site specifically | Exosomes may contain the encoded therapeutic protein, as well as its genetic material (DNA and mRNA) |
| Common merits | Non-cytotoxic effects, a high drug carrying capacity, and a low immunogenic profile | ||