| Literature DB >> 30871144 |
Jenni Karttunen1, Mette Heiskanen2, Anssi Lipponen3, David Poulsen4, Asla Pitkänen5.
Abstract
Extracellular vesicles (EVs) are small vesicles involved in intercellular communication. Data is emerging that EVs and their cargo have potential as diagnostic biomarkers and treatments for brain diseases, including traumatic brain injury and epilepsy. Here, we summarize the current knowledge regarding changes in EV numbers and cargo in status epilepticus (SE) and traumatic brain injury (TBI), which are clinically significant etiologies for acquired epileptogenesis in animals and humans. We also review encouraging data, which suggests that EVs secreted by stem cells may serve as recovery-enhancing treatments for SE and TBI. Using Gene Set Enrichment Analysis, we show that brain EV-related transcripts are positively enriched in rodent models of epileptogenesis and epilepsy, and altered in response to anti-seizure drugs. These data suggest that EVs show promise as biomarkers, treatments and drug targets for epilepsy. In parallel to gathering conceptual knowledge, analytics platforms for the isolation and analysis of EV contents need to be further developed.Entities:
Keywords: anti-seizure drug; antiepileptic drug; biomarker; epileptogenesis; post-traumatic epilepsy; traumatic brain injury
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30871144 PMCID: PMC6470789 DOI: 10.3390/ijms20061259
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1(A) A schematic presentation of the structure of extracellular vesicles (EVs). A lipid bilayer encapsulates the water-soluble cargo. EVs can carry a variety of regulatory molecules, including DNAs, messenger RNAs (mRNA), noncoding RNAs (ncRNA), proteins, and enzymes. (B) Transmission electron microscope images of EVs (white arrowheads) isolated from mesenchymal stem cell culture media (B and B) and rat plasma (B3 and B). The cup-shaped form is caused by the collapse of the water-containing vesicle during the sample preparation. Plasma lipoproteins (black arrowheads in B3 and B) show round morphology.
Articles describing the changes in extracellular vesicle (EV) number in epilepsy and traumatic brain injury (TBI).
| Reference | Species | Disease | Tissue | Isolation Method | Analysis Method | Time Point (post-TBI) | Further EV Characterization | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | human | partial epilepsy | CSF | 10,000 g + 200,000 g ultracentrifugation | quantitative immunoblotting | no | no | Larger amount of CD133 on membrane particles in CSF of epilepsy patients |
| [ | human | severe TBI | CSF | 1500 g + 12,000 g centrifugation | functional prothrombinase assay | 0 d, 3 d, 5 d, 10 d | no | EV number at day 0 post-TBI clearly higher than in control group, but decreased towards day 10 |
| [ | human | severe TBI | plasma | 1500 g + 12,000 g centrifugation | functional prothrombinase assay | 0 d, 3 d, 5 d, 10 d | no | EV number at day 0 post-TBI higher than in controls, decreased progressively between day 0 and day 10, at day 10 about same level as controls |
| [ | human | severe TBI | plasma (arterial) | 2000 g + 13,000 g centrifugation | flow cytometry | emergency room, 6 h, 12 h, 24 h, 2 d, 3 d | no | EV number highest at the emergency room, decreased during the 3 days post-TBI |
| [ | human | severe TBI | plasma (cerebrovenous) | 2000 g + 13,000 g centrifugation | flow cytometry | 6 h, 12 h, 24 h, 2 d, 3 d | no | EV number increased after TBI, decreases during the 3 days post-TBI |
| [ | human | TBI | CSF | 170,000 g ultracentrifugation | flow cytometry | after TBI | EM and fluorescence microscopy | Increased number of EVs post-TBI |
| [ | human | severe TBI | CSF | 2 × 100,000 g ultracentrifugation | NTA | 12 h | TEM, Western blot | Increased EV concentration and smaller EVs after TBI |
| [ | human | severe TBI | CSF | 2 × 100,000 g ultracentrifugation | NTA | d 1, d 2–3, d 4–7 | TEM, Western blot | Highest EV concentration 24 h after injury. Larger EVs on days 4-7 post-TBI |
| [ | mouse | TBI | plasma | ExoQuick kit | flow cytometry | 24 h | EM | Increased EV number after TBI |
| [ | mouse | TBI | total blood | 1500 g + 15,000 g + 100,000 g ultracentrifugation | flow cytometry | 24 h | no | Increased number of total blood EVs and microglial EVs after TBI |
| [ | mouse | TBI | plasma | 120,000 g ultracentrifugation | TRPS | 2 h, 6 h, 12 h, 24 h | TEM, Western blot | Increased EV concentration 24 h after injury. Smaller vesicles at 24 h post-TBI |
| [ | mouse | TBI | plasma | 10,000 g centrifugation | NTA | 30 min, 3 h, 24 h, 3 d | no | Decreased EV number 3 h and 24 h after injury, returned to sham levels by 3 d post-TBI. The share of platelet-derived (CD41+) EVs increased from 3 h to 24 h. |
| [ | piglet | TBI | serum | 2300 g centrifugation | flow cytometry | before and after TBI | no | EV number is increased post-TBI |
| [ | rat | TBI | brain tissue | no isolation | quantitative immunoblotting | 2–8 h | Western blot | Increased expression of CD63 and CD81 in hippocampal EVs at 6 h post-injury. |
Abbreviations: CSF = cerebrospinal fluid, NTA = nanoparticle tracking analysis, EM = electron microscopy, TEM = transmission electron microscopy, TRPS = tunable resistive pulse sensing
Articles describing the beneficial effect of extracellular vesicle (EV) therapy in status epilepticus (SE) and traumatic brain injury (TBI) models.
| Article | Species | Model | Dose and Time Point | EV Type | What was Measured | Isolation Method | Characterization of EVs | Main Finding |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | rat | controlled cortical impact -induced TBI | 100 µg total proteins, 1 d post-injury | rat MSC EVs | Foot-Fault Test, modified Morris water maze, modified Neurological Severity Score, immunohistochemistry | ExoQuick | Total protein concentration, qNano | EVs improved spatial learning and sensorimotor functional recovery, reduced neuroinflammation and increased the number of newly generated endothelial cells. |
| [ | rat | controlled cortical impact -induced TBI | 100 µg proteins, 3 × 109 particles, 1 d after injury | human MSC EVs, cultured in 2D and 3D conditions | Modified neurological severity score, foot-fault test, Morris water maze, immunohistochemistry | ExoQuick | Total protein concentration, qNano | EVs enhanced spatial learning, reduced brain inflammation, increased neurogenesis in DG, vascular density and angiogenesis |
| [ | rat | free -falling method | 100, 250, 500 and 1000 µg/mL, time not mentioned | human exfoliated deciduous teeth stem cell EVs | Basso, Beattie and Bresnahan scores, histopathology and immunofluorescense | ExoQuick | Flow cytometry with CD81, CD63 and CD9, TEM, Western blot with CD9 and CD63 | EVs improved rat motor functional recovery and reduced cortical lesion 2 weeks post-injury |
| [ | mouse | 1 h post-TBI | human MSC EVs | human MSC EVs | Morris water maze, pattern separation test, immunohistochemistry, cytokines in plasma | Anion exchange column | NTA | EVs rescued pattern separation and spatial learning impairments |
| [ | swine | computer-controlled cortical impact -induced TBI | 1 × 1013 particles, 9 h, 1 d, 5 d, 9 d, and 13 d post-injury | human MSC EVs | Neurocognitive function test, neurologic severity score (NSS) | Sequential centrifugation | qNano | EV treated animals had better neurological functions first 5 d post-TBI and they completed neurological recovery in shorter time |
| [ | mouse | controlled cortical impact -induced TBI | EVs from 4 × 106 cells, 2 h post-TBI | endothelial colony-forming cell EVs | Brain water content, beam-walking, corner test, immunofluorescence | Sequential centrifugation | TEM, NTA and Western blot with CD9, CD81 and HSP70 | EVs inhibited PTEN expression, increased AKT expression and reduced Evans blue dye extravasation, brain edema and tight junction degradation |
| [ | rat | mild controlled cortical impact -induced TBI | 100 µg total proteins, 3 h post-TBI | adipose-derived stem cell EVs | Elevated body swing test, forelimb akinesia, paw grasp, in vivo and ex vivo imaging, immunohistochemistry and RNA sequencing | ExoQuick following magnetic bead capture with CD9, CD63 and CD81 | NTA | MALAT1 containing EVs promoted recovery of function on motor behavior and reduction in cortical brain injury |
| [ | mouse | pilocarpine-induced SE | 30 µg, approximately 15x10^9 particles, same day and 18 h after SE | human MSC from bone marrow EVs | Object location test, novel object recognition test, pattern separation test, immunostaining, cytokine levels | Anion exchange column | Protein concentration, NTA, anti-inflammatory assay | EVs reduced inflammation in hippocampus, repressed neurodegeneration, aberrant neurogenesis and cognitive and memory impairments |
Abbreviations: MSC = mesenchymal stem cell, NTA = nanoparticle tracking analysis, DG = dentate gyrus, TEM = transmission electron microscopy
Figure 2The effect of epileptogenesis and epilepsy on EV-related genes in four rodent models of epileptogenesis: (i) status epilepticus (SE) triggered by electrical stimulation of the amygdala [92]; (ii) SE induced by intraperitoneal injection of a chemoconvulsant, pilocarpine [92]; (iii) traumatic brain injury (TBI) induced by lateral fluid-percussion [90]; and (iv) TBI induced with controlled cortical injury (CCI) in mice [91]. Gene expression data of the hippocampus or cortex was used to construct the rank list in Gene Set Enrichment Analysis. Top100 EV-related proteins from Vesiclepedia (http://microvesicles.org/, accessed on: 1 December 2018) were used to construct a gene set. The EV related genes were (A) positively enriched at 3 months (mo) in the amygdala stimulation SE-model, whereas (B) no enrichment was observed at 3 months in the pilocarpine SE-model. In the two TBI models of epileptogenesis, EV-related genes were positively enriched in the hippocampus and cortex at both (C,D) the acute (32 h post- TBI) and (E,F) chronic (4 months post-TBI) time point. Abbreviations: ES, enrichment score; FDR, false discovery rate; fc, fold change.
Articles describing the changes in extracellular vesicle (EV) cargo RNA in status epilepticus (SE) and traumatic brain injury (TBI).
| Article | Species | Condition | Starting Material | Isolation Method | Characterization of EVs | What was Measured | Main Finding |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | mouse and human | blast overexposure injury (mice) and TBI patients | plasma and serum | microchip using GluR2 antibody | DLS and SEM in method set-up with CCM | miRNA-seq, 7 miRNAs validated | miRNA-based biomarker panel for diagnosis of TBI |
| [ | human | TLE and SE patients | CSF | ExoQuick reagent | no characterization | miR-19b-3p, miR-21-5p and miR-451a (top findings) | EV-cargo miRNAs showed more promise than Argonaute2 bound miRNAs as biomarkers |
| [ | human | TLE patients | plasma | ExoQuick reagent | no characterization | miR-27a, miR-328-3p and miR-654-3p levels (top findings) | Higher diagnostic accuracy with EV-cargo miRNAs as compared to Argonaute2 bound miRNAs |
| [ | human | mTLE-HS patients | plasma | ExoQuick reagent | TEM or Western blot (not shown) | microarray | 50 differentially expressed miRNAs, 6 validated (miR-3613-5p, miR-4668-5p, miR8071, miR-197-5p, miR-4322 and miR-6781-5p) |
| [ | human | severe TBI | CSF | ultracentrifugation | TEM, flow cytometry | microarray | 81 miRNAs found, miR-9 and miR-451 differentially packed after TBI |
| [ | mouse | controlled cortical impact-induced TBI | brain tissue | digestion of brain tissue and ultracentrifugation | TEM | miRNA-seq | miR-212 decreased and miR-21, miR-146, miR-7a, and miR-7b increased |
| [ | mouse | fluid percussion-induced TBI | extracellular space | digestion of brain tissue and Total Exosome Isolation reagent | TEM, Western blot | circ-RNA-seq | 231 differentially expressed circular RNAs, 5 validated |
Abbreviations: TLE = temporal lobe epilepsy, CSF = cerebrospinal fluid, TEM = transmission electron microscopy, DLS = dynamic light scattering, SEM = scanning electron microscopy, CCM = cell culture media.
Figure 3The effect of four anti-seizure drugs on EV-related genes in cell lines. The gene expression profiles of the anti-seizure drugs were downloaded from the LINCS database and used to prepare a rank lists for the Gene Set Enrichment Analysis. The top100 EV-related proteins from Vesiclepedia (http://microvesicles.org/, accessed on: 1 December 2018) were used as a gene set. (A) EV-related genes were negatively enriched by carbamazepine in the HCC, RMUGS, and THP1 cell lines. (B) Primidone treatment induced a negative enrichment in the HA1E cell line and a positive enrichment in the PC3 cell line. (C) Gabapentin treatment induced a negative enrichment. (D) Lamotrigine treatment did not show any enrichment of genes. ES, enrichment score; FDR, false discovery rate; HCC, Hepatocellular carcinoma cell line; HA1E, Cellosaurus cell line; PC3, human prostate cancer cell line; VCAP, human prostate cancer cell line; RMUGS, Cellosaurus cell line; THP1, human leukemic monocyte cell line.
Figure 4The effect of two antiepileptic drugs on EV-related genes in the cortex, brainstem, and hippocampus. Microarray gene expression data obtained from the rat brain tissue after a 90-d treatment with levetiracetam or phenytoin was used to construct a rank list for the Gene Set Enrichment Analysis. The top100 EV-related proteins from Vesiclepedia (http://microvesicles.org/, accessed on: 1 December 2018) were used as a gene set. (A–C) Levetiracetam treatment did not induce any enrichment of the EV-related genes in any of the brain areas. (D) Phenytoin treatment induced a negative enrichment of EV-related genes in the cortex. The effect was brain-region specific as no enrichment was observed in the brainstem or hippocampus (E,F). Abbreviations: ES, enrichment score; FDR, false discovery rate; fc, fold change.