| Literature DB >> 31409361 |
Wenlong Feng1,2, Dylan C Dean2, Francis J Hornicek2, Huirong Shi3, Zhenfeng Duan4,5.
Abstract
Ovarian cancer is one of the most common gynecological malignancies. Upon initial diagnosis, the majority of patients present with widespread metastatic growth within the peritoneal cavity. This metastatic growth occurs in stages, with the formation of a pre-metastatic niche occurring prior to macroscopic tumor cell invasion. Exosomes released by the primary ovarian tumor are small extracellular vesicles which prepare the distant tumor microenvironment for accelerated metastatic invasion. They regulate intercellular communication between tumor cells and normal stroma, cancer-associated fibroblasts, and local immune cells within the tumor microenvironment. In this review, we highlight the emerging roles of ovarian cancer exosomes as coordinators of pre-metastatic niche formation, biomarkers amenable to liquid biopsy, and targets of chemotherapy.Entities:
Keywords: Exosome; Metastasis; Ovarian cancer; Pre-metastatic niche
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31409361 PMCID: PMC6691526 DOI: 10.1186/s12943-019-1049-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Cancer ISSN: 1476-4598 Impact factor: 27.401
Fig. 1a. The biogenesis of exosomes and the mechanisms involved in intercellular communication. The exosome is an intraluminal vesicle (ILV) formed by the inward budding of the endosomal membrane during the maturation of the multivesicular endosomes (MVEs) and then secreted after fusing with the cell surface. Uptake by recipient cells occurs via a three step processes: 1. membrane fusion with target cells; 2. endocytosis; 3. activation of surface receptors and signaling. b. Schematic diagram of the exosome. The exosome is a disk-shaped membranous vesicle with a diameter 30–100 nm, and carries a parental cell cargo including lipids, metabolites, proteins, nucleic acids (DNA fragments, mRNA, miRNA, etc.)
Summary of ovarian cancer exosomal proteins involved with metastasis
| Exosomal Proteins | Recipient cells | Role/Mechanism | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Proteomic analysis: 2230 proteins were identified | N/A | Tumorigenesis and metastasis | [ |
| ATF2, MTA1, ROCK1/2 | HUVECs | Angiogenesis | [ |
| GNA12, EPHA2 and COIA1 | MSCs and ECs | Promote MSC and EC migration for metastasis | [ |
| CD44 | HPMCs | Tumor cell invasion. | [ |
| RNA-binding protein LIN28 | HEK293 cells | Increase HEK293 cell invasion and migration | [ |
| Nanog | N/A | Tumor cell proliferation and invasion | [ |
Abbreviations: ATF2 Activating transcription factor 2, MTA1 Metastasis-associated protein 1, ROCK Rho-Associated, Coiled-Coil Containing Protein Kinase, HUVECs Human umbilical vein endothelial cells, GNA12 Guanine nucleotide-binding protein subunit alpha-12, EPHA2 ephrin type-A receptor 2, COIA1 Collagen alpha-1 (XVIII) chain, MSCs Mesenchymal stem cells, ECs endothelial cells, HPMCs Human peritoneal mesothelial cells, LIN28 Lin-28 homolog A, HEK293 human embryonic kidney
Summary of ovarian cancer exosomal miRNAs involved with metastasis
| Exosomal miRNAs | Recipient cells | Role/Mechanism | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| miR-940, miR-222-3p,miR-21–3p, miR-125 b-5p, miR-181 d-5p | TAMs | M2 phenotype polarization, EOC proliferation and migration | [ |
| miRNA 21 and 29a | ES2 OC cellsLP9 mesothelial cells | Mesothelial cell clearance | [ |
| miR-99a-5p | HPMC | Cell invasion through fibronectin and vitronectin upregulation | [ |
| MMP1 mRNAs | MeT-5A and HPMC | Destruction of peritoneal mesothelium barrier | [ |
| let-7a-f and miR-200a-c | N/A | Correlates with ovarian cancer invasiveness | [ |
Abbreviations: TAMs Tumor-associated macrophages, HPMC Human peritoneal mesothelial cells, OC ovarian cancer, EOC Epithelial ovarian cancer, MMP Matrix metallopeptidase
Fig. 2Impact of ovarian cancer-exosomes on target cells during pre-metastatic niche formation. a. Ovarian cancer-exosomes induce apoptosis of dendritic cells, increase secretion of IL-6, and inhibit function of T cells and NK cells. b. Ovarian cancer-exosomes with their cargo, such as ATF2, MTA1, sE-cad, and CD147, which acts on human vein endothelial cells, inducing angiogenesis and vascular permeability. c. Ovarian cancer-exosomes convert fibroblasts to CAFs. d. Ovarian cancer-exosomes deliver miRNAs to macrophages and elicit M2 macrophage polarization by regulating the suppressor of cytokine signaling (SOCS)4/5/ STAT3 pathway in macrophages. e. Phenotypic conversion and apoptosis of PMCs, induced by ovarian cancer-exosomes, clears the mesothelial cell barrier of the peritoneum and omentum. OC ovarian cancer, NK natural killer, ATF2 Activating transcription factor 2, MTA1 Metastasis-associated protein 1, sE-cad soluble E-cadherin, SOCS Suppress cytokine signaling, STAT3 Signal transducer and activator of transcription 3, PMC Peritoneal mesothelial cell, CAF cancer-associated fibroblast
Roles of ovarian cancer exosomes in pre-metastatic niche formation
| Exosome Function | Origin of exosomes | Recipient cells | Effect | Potential targets | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Immunosuppression | Ascites of OC patients | T cells | Arrest T cells | GD3, TCR | [ |
| Ascites of OC patients | Monocytes | Cytokine production | TLR signaling pathways | [ | |
| Ascites of OC patients | PBMCs and DCs | Apoptosis | FasL | [ | |
| Ascites of OC patients | T cells | Apoptosis | FasL | [ | |
| OC cells | T cells | Counterattack against activated T cells | LPA and FasL | [ | |
| Ovarian tumor tissues | T cells | T cell inhibition | Depletion or blockade of PS | [ | |
| EOC cells and ascites | NK cells | Cytotoxicity inhibition | NKG2D | [ | |
| Angiogenesis | OC cells | HUVECs | Affect VEGF or HIF-1α | ATF2 and MTA1 | [ |
| OC cells | HUVECs | CD147 stimulates VEGF expression | CD147 | [ | |
| OC cells | HUVECs | Activate β-catenin and NF-κB signaling | sE-cad | [ | |
| Stroma remodeling | OC cells | ADSCs | Transition ADSCs to CAFs | α-SMA, SDF-1, TGF-β SMAD2 and PI3K/AKT pathway | [ |
| OC cells | Macrophages | Macrophage M2 polarization | miR-21–3p, miR-125b-5p, and miR-181d-5p SOCS4/5/ STAT3 pathway | [ |
Abbreviations: OC ovarian cancer, GD 3 ganglioside 3, TCR T-cell receptor, TLR Toll-like receptor, PBMCs peripheral blood lymphocytes, DCs dendritic cells, FasL Fas ligand, LPA Lysophosphatidic acid, PS phosphatidylserine, EOC Epithelial ovarian cancer, NK natural killer, HIF Hypoxia-inducible factor, HUVECs Human umbilical vein endothelial cells, sE-cad soluble E-cadherin, ADSCs adipose tissue-derived mesenchymal stem cells, α-SMA alpha-smooth muscle actin, SDF-1 stromal cell-derived factor 1, PI3K Phosphoinositide 3-kinases, AKT Protein kinase B, SOCS Suppress cytokine signaling, STAT3 Signal transducer and activator of transcription 3
Fig. 3Two main methods of ovarian cancer metastasis within the peritoneal cavity, direct implantation and hematogenous spread. a Distribution of ovarian cancer nests in the peritoneal cavity. b Mechanisms of ovarian cancer-exosome establishment of the pre-metastatic niche before metastasis. c After the formation of pre-metastatic niche, tumor cells home to the metastatic site then colonize and support vessel budding. OC: ovarian cancer; NK: natural killer; HUVECs: Human umbilical vein endothelial cells; TAM: tumor-associated macrophages; PMC: Peritoneal mesothelial cell; CAF: cancer-associated fibroblasts.