| Literature DB >> 31178970 |
Ying Guo1, Jin Tan1, Yuyang Miao2, Zuoming Sun3, Qiang Zhang1.
Abstract
Hypoxia, as one of the severe cellular stresses, can cause cellular injury and even cell death. Apoptosis is the main mechanism of regulating cell death and is closely related to the cell death caused by hypoxia. However, hypoxia-induced apoptosis is not entirely the result of direct hypoxic stimulus of cells. In recent years, it has been found that cells injured by hypoxia can shed a kind of membranous vesicles, which are called microvesicles (MVs). MVs can carry bioactive molecules from injured mother cells and appear in blood, cerebrospinal fluid, and other body fluids. MVs can induce normal cell apoptosis by transferring bioactive molecules into adjacent cells and amplifying the hypoxic injury in an organism. This review summarizes the characteristic changes of MVs derived from hypoxic cells and the mechanism of normal cell apoptosis mediated by hypoxic cell-derived MVs. Finally, we introduce the significance of this apoptosis-apoptosis cascade reaction in hypoxic diseases.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31178970 PMCID: PMC6501227 DOI: 10.1155/2019/5972152
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oxid Med Cell Longev ISSN: 1942-0994 Impact factor: 6.543
Figure 1Differences in the release mechanism of MVs derived from activation or apoptosis of cells. (a) Apoptosis inducers activate caspase 3 and further activate ROCK I. (b) Activation inducers increase intracellular calcium and activate translocase and flippase. (c) Both of the mechanisms can lead to cytoskeleton destruction and MV release. The surface of MVs contains specific receptors, ligands, and other bioactivators from mother cells; it also contains DNA, miRNA, proteins, and other cargo.
Figure 2Combination of MVs with target cells. (a) Direct fusion: the MV membrane fuses with the target cell plasma membrane, releasing the cargo into the cytoplasm; (b) receptor ligand binding: specific receptors of MVs bind to ligands on the surface of target cells; (c) endocytosis: MVs are taken up by target cells through receptor-mediated endocytosis. The internationalization can be followed by (i) fusion of MVs and endosome membranes, then release of cargo and (ii) the endosomal pathway to lysosome: MVs targeting acidic lysosomes via the endosomal pathway.
Figure 3Different mechanisms of apoptosis induced by MVs. (a) MVs carry ROS and transfer it to target cells; increased oxidative stress in cells induce apoptosis through P38 and JNK1/2 pathways; (b) MVs carry caspase 3 and transfer it to target cells, increase the content of ROS in cells, and increase apoptosis by inhibiting the PI3K/Akt/eNOS pathway; (c) FasL and TRAIL on the surface of MVs bind to the corresponding receptors Fas and TNFR on the surface of target cells and participate in the activation of downstream apoptotic cascade reaction.
The role of MV in the tumor.
| Main role | MV origins | Acting cells | Type of action |
|---|---|---|---|
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| |||
| Promote growth | Glioblastoma cells | Human glioma cells | MVs transport RNA and proteins |
| Promote tumor angiogenesis | Human lung cancer cells | Stromal cells | Express more angiogenic factors |
| Mediated immune escape | Human colorectal cancer cells | NK cells | MVs transport miR-126 and TGF- |
| Melanoma cells | T cells | MVs transport FasL | |
| Promote thrombosis | Human pancreatic cancer cells | Platelets | MVs transport tissue factor |
| Promoting normal cell apoptosis | Lung and pancreatic tumor cells | Myoblasts | MVs transport miR-21 |
|
| |||
| Induce tumor cell apoptosis | Platelets | Lung and colon carcinoma ectopic tumors | MVs transport miR-24 |
| Human hepatic stem cells | Hepatoma cells | MVs transfer miRNAs with potential antitumor activity |