| Literature DB >> 31137912 |
Ernesto Gargiulo1, Jerome Paggetti2, Etienne Moussay3.
Abstract
Small extracellular vesicles (small EVs) are commonly released by all cells, and are found in all body fluids. They are implicated in cell to cell short- and long-distance communication through the transfer of genetic material and proteins, as well as interactions between target cell membrane receptors and ligands anchored on small EV membrane. Beyond their canonical functions in healthy tissues, small EVs are strategically used by tumors to communicate with the cellular microenvironment and to establish a proper niche which would ultimately allow cancer cell proliferation, escape from the immune surveillance, and metastasis formation. In this review, we highlight the effects of hematological malignancy-derived small EVs on immune and stromal cells in the tumor microenvironment.Entities:
Keywords: exosomes; hematological malignancies; immunity; leukemia; lymphoma; myeloma; tumor microenvironment; tumor-derived small EVs
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31137912 PMCID: PMC6562645 DOI: 10.3390/cells8050511
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cells ISSN: 2073-4409 Impact factor: 6.600
Figure 1Overview of hematological malignancy-derived small EV effects on immune cells. In order to escape from the immune system, tumor cells deploy several strategies. TEVs are used to stimulate B cell expansion and activity against several immune cells (e.g., T cells and NK). T cells are known to be affected on the proliferative potential and cytokine production. TEVs directly reduce the T cells migration, leading to up-regulation of receptors involved in immune suppression and or activate pro-apoptotic signals. Alternatively, MDSCs acquire strong immune suppression activity, either from interaction of TEVs or aberrant differentiation from myeloid cells (e.g., monocytes) or immature DCs. Under the effect of TEVs, monocytes polarize towards a pro-tumorigenic form. This leads to pro-inflammatory cytokines release and expression of receptors involved in immune suppression. NK cells have high cytotoxic activity, the tumor uses TEVs to heavily decrease this threat. Furthermore, accumulation of pro-tumorigenic MDSCs also increases this inhibitory effect. TEVs have been reported to stimulate macrophage polarization towards M2 form, this ensure the TME with an increasing pool of TAM which release pro-tumorigenic growth factors, chemokines and cytokines. The consequences of TEV uptake by neutrophils is still under investigation, nevertheless their aberrant activity has been reported to be the cause of CML-like symptoms in vivo experiments. Concerning DCs, it is important to highlight the capacity of TEVs to boost the tumor immune response, transforming the communication through small EVs to a double-edge weapon against the disease.
Overview of the hematological malignancy-derived small EV functions based on the content and immune cell types.
| Hematopoietic Malignancies | Small EVs Content | Target Cells | Effects | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lymphoma | LMP1 | B cells | Increased proliferation | [ |
| CLL | miR-363 | T cells | Migration inhibition | [ |
| DLBCL | Fas, FasL, and TRAIL | T cells | Increased apoptosis | [ |
| Lymphoma | CD39 and CD73 | T cells Macrophages | Accumulation of Adenosine | [ |
| T Lymphoma | TGF-β, IL-6 and PGE2 | DCs | Block of maturation | [ |
| T- and B-leukemia/lymphoma | NKG2D ligands and TGF-β | NK cells | Reduced cytotoxicity | [ |
| CML | TGF-β | NK cells | Reduced cytotoxicity | [ |
| AML | CD33, CD34, CD117, MICA/MICB, and TGF-β | NK cells | Reduced cytotoxicity | [ |
| MM | HSP70 | NK cells | Activation of the NF-κB pathway and IFN-γ released | [ |
| CLL | Y RNA hY4 | Monocytes | Polarization induction | [ |
| DLBCL | MyD88 | Macrophages | Pro-inflammatory signals | [ |
| CML | BCR/ABL | Neutrophils | Aberrant BCR/ABL expression and CML-like symptoms | [ |
| Lymphoma | HSP72 | MDSCs | Suppressive functions | [ |
| MM | HSP72 | MDSCs | Proliferation increased and activity enhanced | [ |
Disease abbreviations: Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia (CLL); Diffuse Large B Cell Lymphoma (DLBCL); Chronic Myeloid Leukemia (CML); Acute Myelogenous Leukemia (AML); Multiple Myeloma (MM).
Figure 2Overview of hematological malignancy-derived small EV effects on stromal cells. In the tumor-stroma communication, TEVs play an essential role in re-shaping the microenvironment. Small EVs coming from different tumors have been described to induce differentiation and increase proliferation of fibroblasts. Through the transfer of different molecules, TEVs convert fibroblasts and MSCs into CAFs which in turn boost tumor invasion, survival and growth. TEVs have the ability to block the MSCs physiological differentiation into osteoblasts causing a progressive bone loss. Under the activity of TEVs, MSCs are further altered in proliferation and migration, resulting in the release of MSC-derived small EVs which in turn boost survival and proliferation of the tumor cells. MSC-derived small EVs mediate immunosuppression in various immune-effector cells, with Tregs being one of the most deregulated immune cell subtype. Indeed, MSC-derived small EVs directly target CD4+ T cells, thus reducing their activation and expansion towards Treg compartment. Furthermore, the aberrant activation of monocytes leads to differentiation into macrophages and consequently Tregs expansion. ECs are an essential component of the microenvironment necessarily for angiogenesis. ECs are actively targeted by TEVs with the aim to increase vascularization in the tumor surrounding, leading to higher proliferation and tumor spreading. Finally, osteoclasts, a further component needed for bone remodeling, under the effect of TEVs show a deleterious activation and differentiation which lead to bone loss and pro-tumorigenic chemokine and growth factor release.
Overview of the hematological malignancy-derived small EV functions based on the content and stromal cell types.
| Hematopoietic Malignancies | Small EVs Content | Target Cells | Effects | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| AML | CXCR4 and IGF-IR | Fibroblasts | Proliferation and VEGF expression | [ |
| MM | miR-27b-3p and | Fibroblasts | Myeloma-fibroblasts proliferation and survival boost | [ |
| T cells Leukemia and CML | hTERT | Fibroblasts | CAF phenotype acquisition | [ |
| CLL | microRNA and | MSCs | CAF phenotype acquisition | [ |
| MM | miR-21 and | MSCs | Proliferation and CAF induction | [ |
| ATLL | miR-21 and | MSCs | MSCs proliferation | [ |
| AML | miR-7977 | MSCs | Reduced ability to support CD34+ cells in the bone marrow | [ |
| CML | AREG | MSCs | Aberrant activating of EGFR signalling | [ |
| MM | AREG | MSCs | Block differentiation towards osteoblasts | [ |
| AML | VEGF and VEGFR mRNA | ECs | Pro-angiogenesis mediated by increased glycolysis | [ |
| MM | STAT3, JNK1/2/3, ERK1/2 and P53 | ECs | Enhanced migration and tube formation | [ |
| MM | miR-135b | ECs | Aberrant HIF-FIH signalling | [ |
| CML | miR-210 | ECs | Enhanced tube formation | [ |
| CML | miR-17 -92 cluster | ECs | Enhanced migration and tube formation | [ |
| MM | piRNA-823 | ECs | Enhanced proliferation, tube formation and invasion | [ |
| CML (Blast crisis) | mir-126 | ECs | Increased tumor cells migration | [ |
| APML; AML-M3 | PML-RARα mRNA | ECs | Acquisition of pro-coagulant and tissue factor properties | [ |
| MM | AREG | Pre-osteoclasts | Increased differentiation towards osteoclasts | [ |
| MM | DKK-1 | Osteoblasts | Block of function and differentiation | [ |
Disease abbreviations: Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia (CLL); Chronic Myeloid Leukemia (CML); Acute Myelogenous Leukemia (AML); Multiple Myeloma (MM); Adult T-cell Leukemia/Lymphoma (ATLL); Acute Promyelocytic Leukemia (APML).