| Literature DB >> 31281356 |
Maria Concetta Cufaro1,2, Damiana Pieragostino2,3, Paola Lanuti4, Claudia Rossi2,3, Ilaria Cicalini1,2, Luca Federici2,3, Vincenzo De Laurenzi3,5, Piero Del Boccio1,2.
Abstract
Extracellular Vesicles (EVs) are small membrane-enclosed particles released by cells and able to vehiculate information between them. The term EVs categorizes many and different vesicles based on their biogenesis and release pathway, such as exosomes (Exo), ectosomes, or shedding microvesicles (SMVs), apoptotic blebs (ABs), and other EVs subsets, generating a heterogeneous group of components able to redistribute their cargo into the entire organism. Moreover EVs are becoming increasingly important in monitoring cancer progression and therapy, since they are able to carry specific disease biomarkers such as Glypican-1, colon cancer-associated transcript 2, CD63, CD24, and many others. The importance of their biological role together with their heterogeneity prompted researchers to adopt and standardize purification methods able to isolate EVs for characterizing their cargo. In this way, mass spectrometry (MS)-based proteomics approaches are emerging as promising tool for the identification and quantification of EVs protein cargoes, but this technique resulted to be deeply influenced by the low quality of the isolation techniques. This review presents the state-of-the-art of EVs isolation, purification, and characterization for omics studies, with a particular focus to their potential use in monitoring cancer progression and therapy.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31281356 PMCID: PMC6590542 DOI: 10.1155/2019/1639854
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Oncol ISSN: 1687-8450 Impact factor: 4.375
Figure 1Number of papers published in the last decade in cancer EVs research.
Overview of the main characteristics of different types of extracellular membranous vesicles.
| Exo | MVs | ABs | LOs | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Size (diameter) | 30-100 nm [ | 100-1000 nm [ | 50-500 nm [ | 1-10 |
| Flotation density | 1.10-1.21 g/mL | NA | 1.16-1.28 g/mL | NA |
| Morphology |
| Various shapes | Heterogeneous [ | Large size - Various shapes |
| Lipid composition | Cholesterol, ceramide, sphingomyelin, low phosphatidylserine exposure, lipid rafts | High phosphatidylserine exposure, cholesterol [ | High phosphatidylserine exposure | High phosphatidylserine exposure, cholesterol |
| Protein markers | Alix, CD63, CD9, CD81 [ | Selectins, integrins, CD40, MMP | Histones [ | ARF6, CK18, |
| Site of origin | MVEs [ | Plasma membrane | - | Plasma membrane |
| Mode of extracellular release | Exocytosis of MVEs [ | Budding/blebbing of the plasma membrane [ | Cell shrinkage and death | Budding from the plasma membrane [ |
| Composition | Proteins, miRNA, mRNA | Proteins, miRNA, mRNA [ | Proteins, DNA [ | Proteins, miRNA, mRNA, DNA [ |
MVs, microvesicles; ABs, apoptotic blebs; LOs, large oncosomes; MVEs, multivesicular endosomes; MVBs, multivesicular bodies; MMP, metalloproteinases; NA, not known.
Figure 2Large oncosomes: the new players in intercellular communication for tumor progression and metastasis. Tumor cells communicate each other and with neighboring normal cells in their microenvironment by sending out biological signals enclosed in EVs. Large Oncosomes are membrane vesicles released from “ameboid” tumor cells that are able to facilitate migration of tumor cells and promoting metastasis. The figure shows how specific tumor-cell EVs are involved in tumor progression by targeting fibroblasts and endothelial and immune cells or by altering the structure and composition of ECM. EVs, Extracellular Vesicles; MVs, microvesicles; LOs, large oncosomes; ABs, apoptotic blebs; MVEs, multivesicular endosomes; ECM, extracellular matrix; TGF-β, transforming growth factor beta; FN1, fibronectin-1.
Established methods of EVs isolation and purification.
| Method | Advantages | Disadvantages |
|---|---|---|
| Differential ultracentrifugation | Commonly used method allowing comparison between studies [ | Slow and laborious technique |
| Density gradient ultracentrifugation | Commonly used method allowing comparison between studies | Slow and laborious technique [ |
| Ultrafiltration | Concentrates large volumes | Potential losses under high pressure and unspecific membrane adsorption [ |
| Immunoaffinity capture | Highly pure product | Costly |
| Precipitation or “salting out” | Does not require specialized equipment | Relatively impure products |
| Size exclusion chromatography | Good separation [ | Need to concentrate the samples [ |
| Microfluidics techniques | Rapid | Shear stress can damage EVs structure [ |
Figure 3An example of workflow for biomarker discovery process based on purification and proteomics characterization of EVs isolated from various biological samples. After vesicles lysis, protein digestion is performed to separate the peptides that are analyzed through proteomics strategies. High resolution LC-MS instruments allow obtaining a protein list that can be identified and quantified by powerful bioinformatics software. Finally functional enrichment analysis identifies local networks and potential biomarkers. EVs, Extracellular Vesicles; LC-MS/MS, liquid chromatography coupled with online tandem mass spectrometry.
Summary of the most significant study designs used to analyze the EV proteome, including potential biomarkers identified.
| Reference | Biofluid | Pathological condition | Isolation technique | EV subtype | MS-based strategy | Candidate biomarkers |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sun | Saliva and serum | Lung Cancer | PureEXO® isolation kit (101Bio) | Exo | ESI-QTOF MS (MaXis Impact) | Vimentin, Phospholipid transfer protein, Annexin, Zinc-alpha-2-glycoprotein, Lactoperoxidase, Proteasome subunit alpha, Grancalcin, Cysteine-rich secretory protein 3, Calpain small subunit 1, Histone H3 |
| Sun | Saliva | Lung Cancer | Ultracentrifugation | Exo and MVs | LC-MS/MS (Q Exactive) | Ras GTPase-activating-like protein, BPI fold-containing family A member 1, Cornulin, Mucin-5B |
| Raimondo | Urine | Renal Cell Carcinoma | Iodixanol density centrifugation | Exo | LC-ESI-MS/MS (MaXis hybrid UHR-QTOF) | Matrix metalloproteinase-9, Ceruloplasmin, Podocalyxin, Dickkopf related protein 4, Carbonic Anhydrase IX, Aquaporin-1, Extracellular Matrix Metalloproteinase Inducer, Neprilysin, Dipeptidase 1, Syntenin-1 |
| Chen | Serum | Colorectal Cancer | Ultracentrifugation | Exo | HPLC-MS/MS (Orbitrap Fusion) | Fibronectin-1, Annexin-A1, Metalloproteinase-9, Galectin-3 |
| Aqrawi | Saliva and tear | Sjögren's Syndrome | Size-exclusion chromatography | Exo and MVs | LC-MS/MS (Q Exactive) | Lymphocyte-specific protein 1, Adipocyte plasma membrane-associated protein, Copine-1, Thioredoxin-dependent peroxidase reductase |
| Choi | Ascites | Colorectal Cancer | Iodixanol and sucrose density centrifugation | MVs | LC-ESI-MS/MS (LTQ) | Carcinoembryonic antigen cell adhesion molecule 5, Adhesion G-protein-coupled receptor E5, Galectin-3, Epithelial cell adhesion molecule, Aminopeptidase N, Trophoblast glycoprotein |
| Kittivorapart | Plasma | HbE/ | Ultracentrifugation | Non specified | HPLC-MS/MS (Orbitrap Fusion) | Alpha hemoglobin–stabilizing protein, Catalase, Superoxide dismutase, Hemopexin, Haptoglobin |
| Shiromizu | Serum | Colorectal Cancer | Sucrose density centrifugation | Not specified | LC-MS/MS (Q Exactive) | Annexin-A3, A4, A5 and A11, Tenascin-N, Mucin-5B, Matrix metalloproteinase-9, Transferrin receptor protein 1 |
| Sequeiros | Urine | Prostate Cancer | Ultracentrifugation | Not specified | SRM-MS (5500 Q-Trap) | Adseverin, Transglutaminase-4 |
| Arbelaiz | Serum | Cholangiocarcinoma (CCA) | Ultracentrifugation | Not specified | UPLC-MS/MS (LTQ Orbitrap XL and Synapt G2-Si) | CCA: Aminopeptidase N, Pantetheinase, Polymeric immunoglobulin receptor |
| Yang | Seminal fluid | Prostate Cancer | Sucrose density centrifugation | Exo | HPLC-MS/MS (LTQ Orbitrap Elite) | Semenogelin-1, Phosphoglycerate dehydrogenase, Galectin-3-binding protein, Actin, Glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase |
| Barnabas | Uterine Liquid Biopsy | Ovarian Cancer | Ultracentrifugation | MVs | LC-MS/MS (Q Exactive) | Calcium-activated chloride channel regulator 4, Involucrin, Protein S100-A14, Protein S100-A2, Serpin B5 |
| Turay | Plasma | Prostate Cancer | Exoquick™ Isolation Kit | Exo | HPLC-MS/MS (LCQ Deca XP) | Iroquois homeobox protein 5, Mitochondrial tumor suppressor 1 isoform 4, Trinucleotide repeat containing 6B isoform 3 |
ESI, electrospray ionization; QTOF, quadrupole time-of-flight; LTQ, linear trap quadrupole; SRM, selected reaction monitoring.