| Literature DB >> 31428232 |
Muhammad Babar Khawar1,2,3, Muddasir Hassan Abbasi3,4, Zerwa Siddique5, Amin Arif3, Nadeem Sheikh3.
Abstract
Extracellular vesicles (EVs) are a heterogeneous group of membrane-bounded vesicles that are believed to be produced and secreted by presumably all cell types under physiological and pathological conditions, including tumors. EVs are very important vehicles in intercellular communications for both shorter and longer distances and are able to deliver a wide range of cargos including proteins, lipids, and various species of nucleic acids effectively. EVs have been emerging as a novel biotherapeutic platform to efficiently deliver therapeutic cargos to treat a broad range of diseases including cancer. This vast potential of drug delivery lies in their abilities to carry a variety of cargos and their ease in crossing the biological membranes. Similarly, their presence in a variety of body fluids makes them a potential biomarker for early diagnosis, prognostication, and surveillance of cancer. Here, we discuss the relatively least and understudied aspects of EV biology and tried to highlight the obstacles and limitations in their clinical applications and also described most of the new warfronts to beat cancer at multiple stages. However, much more challenges still remain to evaluate EV-based therapeutics, and we are very much hopeful that the current work prompts further discovery.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31428232 PMCID: PMC6683766 DOI: 10.1155/2019/9702562
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oxid Med Cell Longev ISSN: 1942-0994 Impact factor: 6.543
Figure 1Biogenesis of exosomes and microvesicles: a schematic representation of endosome formation by internalizing the extracellular substances by invagination and pinching of the plasma membrane via endocytosis. These endosomes are transformed to multivesicular bodies (MVBs) by taking up a variety of cytosolic contents (proteins, nucleic acids, and various metabolites) via inward budding of late endosomes. Later, these MVBs may fuse with the plasma membrane at certain points to release the internal vesicles named as “exosomes.” In contrast, microvesicles are formed due to outward protrusion/blebbing of the plasma membrane. A diverse array of cargos is packed into these protrusions which pinched off the parent cell giving rise to microvesicles.
Figure 2Therapeutic strategies to target EVs for cancer treatment. There are a number of potential ways to target the EV-mediated intercellular communication. (A) EV biogenesis or release can be targeted via interfering the specific components involved in EV production or surface shedding. (B) EVs can be targeted and specifically removed from the circulation using different substances, i.e., specific antibodies. (C) EV uptake/internalization by the recipient cells can be interrupted by targeting the EV ligands or cell surface receptors.
Various EVs used as a drug delivery vehicle in disease treatment.
| Serial no. | EV type | Loaded drug | Disease type | Remarks | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | DEXAFP |
| Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) | Improved tumor microenvironment, elevated CD8+ T lymphocytes expressing IFN- | [ |
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| 2 | miR-34c-5p-loaded exosome | miR-34c-5p | Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) | Downregulated miR-34c-5p, regulates its own expression by targeting RAB27B through positive feedback | [ |
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| 3 | (i) Doxorubicin-loaded breast cancer-derived exosomes (ExoDOX) | (i) Doxorubicin | Breast cancer | ExoDOX are more stable and tolerable compared to free drug cardiotoxicity | [ |
| (ii) IRGD-exos | (ii) Doxorubicin | The loaded specific IRGD-exos efficiently targeted | [ | ||
| (iii) miR-let-7a-loaded GE11-positive exosome-dependent EFGR | (iii) miR-let-7a | Loaded exosome binds to PDGF receptor transmembrane domain of EFGR, causes tumor growth inhibition | [ | ||
| (iv) Tea polyphenol epigallocatechin gallate- (EGCG-) loaded exosomes | (iv) EGCG | Decrease in CSF-1 and CCL2 tumor growth factor-associated macrophages (M2), increased activity of tumor-inhibiting macrophage phenotype (M1), upregulation of miR-16 | [ | ||
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| 4 | Macrophage-derived exosomes loaded with paclitaxel (exoPTX) | Paclitaxel | Multiple Drug Resistance (MDR) cancer | Increased drug toxicity by bypassing drug efflux transporter-mediated resistance mechanisms, decreased metastasis growth | [ |
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| 5 | (i) Loaded exosomes from brain endothelial cell line bEND.3 | (i) Rhodamine, doxorubicin, and paclitaxel | Glioblastoma | Doxorubicin-loaded exosome showed higher activity and much reduction in tumor size in the brain of zebrafish | [ |
| (ii) Mesenchymal cell derived-exosomes loaded with anti-miR-9 | (ii) Temozolomide (TMZ) | Reversion of multidrug transporter expression, sensitize cells to TMZ, increase caspase activity and cell death | [ | ||
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| 6 | Catalase loaded monocyte-derived exosomes (ExoCAT) | Catalase | Parkinson's disease (PD) | The exosomes prevented mononuclear phagocytic entrapment of drug | [ |
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| 7 | DC-derived Lamp2b fusion exosomes | siRNA against BACE1 | Alzheimer's disease | Loaded exosomes expressed RVG surface peptide and actively targeted neuronal cells and specific gene silencing activity in targeted neurons | [ |
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| 8 | Pancreatic cancer cell-derived exosomes | Curcumin | Pancreatic cancer | Induced apoptosis | [ |
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| 9 | Curcumin-loaded exosomes (CUR-EXO) | Curcumin | Microglial cell inflammation | Inflammation reduced after 2 h, enhanced apoptosis. Intranasal administration caused inflammation-induced autoimmune encephalomyelitis in mice | [ |
Different types of potential EVs in cancer treatment.
| Serial no. | EV type | Cancer type | Mode of action | Remarks | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | DC-derived exosomes | Tumor-associated fibroblast | Immunotherapy | CD8+ T-cells releasing EVs kill mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) and attenuate tumor growth | [ |
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| 2 | (i) Rab27a-regulated exosomes | Breast cancer | (i) Exosome release | (i) RNAi-dependent knockdown of Rab27a reduced exosome secretion, decreased tumor growth | [ |
| (ii) PEG-SMRwt-Clu regulated exosomes | (ii) Exosome release | (ii) Regulates secretion of Nef-positive exosome-like vesicles | [ | ||
| (iii) NK and DC-modulated exosomes | (iii) Exosome internalization | (iii) Impairment of DC differentiation by IL6 overexpression and Stat3 phosphorylation | [ | ||
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| 3 | Dimethyl amiloride- (DMA-) regulated exosomes | Acute myeloid leukemia | Exosome release | DMA inhibit exchange of Na+/H+ and Na+/Ca2+, improve efficacy of cyclophosphamide | [ |
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| 4 | (i) GBM-derived EVs | Glioblastoma | (i) Binding inhibition | (i) Heparin inhibits oncogenic EFGRvIII mRNA transferation | [ |
| (ii) Stromal cell-derived exosomes | (ii) Exosome overexpression | (ii) miR-302-367 in glioma cells overexpress exosomes | [ | ||
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| 5 | Prostate cancer cell-derived exosomes | Castration-resistant prostate cancer cell | Exosome release | Manumycin-A (MA) inhibits Ras/Raf/ERK1 signaling and ERK-dependent oncogenic splicing factor hnRNP H1 and release exosome in cancer | [ |
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| 6 | Exosomes | Pancreatic cancer | Delivery vehicle | The exosomes deliver RNAi to oncogenic KRAS | [ |
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| 7 | Colorectal cancer cell line-derived exosomes | Colorectal cancer | Exosome knockout | Amiloride inhibits exosome production and blunts MDSC suppressor functions | [ |
Several potential EV biomarkers found in different body fluids.
| Cancer type | Body fluid | Biomarker | Method/technique | Clinical significance | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Breast cancer | Plasma serum | Integrins | ELISA | Src activation and upregulation of proinflammatory S100 genes | [ |
| miR-9 | qRT-PCR | ||||
| HER2, CD47, Del-1, miR-1246, miR-21 | Microfluidic chip | Upregulated, miR-1246 attacks CCNG2 and promotes drug resistance against cancer | [ | ||
| Glutathione S-transferase P1 (GSTP1), ubiquitin carboxyl terminal hydrolase-1 (UCH-L1), NANOG, NEUROD1, HER2, KDR, CD49d, CXCR4, CD44, miR-340-5p, miR-130a-3p, miR-93-5p, miR-17-5p | qRT-PCR | Partial remission (PR)/complete remission (CR) | [ | ||
| TRPC5 | Confocal analysis, Western blot | Elevated levels show poor prognosis | [ | ||
| Survivin | ELISA | Elevated survivin- | [ | ||
| Periostin | Nanoparticle tracking analysis | Higher levels in patients with lymph node metastasis | [ | ||
| miR-373 | qRT-PCR | Controversial effect on BC | [ | ||
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| Glioblastoma | Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) | EGFRvIII | Western blot | Mutated EGFRvIII cause: increase mitogenic factor Akt, suppress apoptosis, downregulate Bcl-2 | [ |
| PTRF/caveolin-1, miR-21 | qRT-PCR | Elevation leads to recurrence | [ | ||
| DNM3, p65, p53 | Microarray | Elevated levels in primary and recurrent GBC | [ | ||
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| Melanoma | Serum | MDA-9, GRP78 | Western blot | Elevation in metastasis | [ |
| miR-125b | Western blot | Melanoma patient PDS and OS patients showed high survival | [ | ||
| PD-1, CD28 | qRT-PCR | Downregulation leads to MM progression | [ | ||
| MIA, S-100 | Immunoaffinity capture | Interaction with ECM proteins: promote metastasis | [ | ||
| CD63, caveolin-1 | In-house sandwich ELISA (Exotest) | Elevated levels in MP | [ | ||
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| Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) | Serum | TAK1 | Microarray analysis | Upregulation | [ |
| miR-320a | qRT-PCR | Cancer suppression | [ | ||
| miR-122 | qRT-PCR | Upregulate septin-9: taxol resistance | [ | ||
| miR-21, 211, 222, 224 | qRT-PCR | Upregulation in cancer patients | [ | ||
| miR-718, 1246 | qRT-PCR | Downregulation causes HCC progression, miR-718 targets EGR-3 and increases proliferation | [ | ||
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| Ovarian cancer | Plasma | miR-21, 141, 200a, 200c, 200b, 203, 205, 214, 222-3p | miRNA array | Suppress apoptosis through binding to APAF1, grant paclitaxel resistance. miR-21 targets Bcl-2, TPM1, PDCD4, maspin, and PTEN leading to tumor proliferation. miR-200 attacks ZEB1/2 leading to EM. miR-205 targets the HER2 pathway causing tumor suppression | [ |
| Phosphatidylserine | Nanoparticle tracking analysis | Elevated levels in cancer patients | [ | ||
| Claudin-4 | Western blot | Upregulation in OC patients | [ | ||
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| Multiple myeloma | Serum | MSC-derived miR-15a, Let-7b, miR-18a | qRT-PCR array analysis | Suppressor of MM | [ |
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| Colorectal cancer (CRC) | Serum | miR-9 | qRT-PCR | Inhibits suppressive expression SOCS5, upregulate endothelial cell migration | [ |
| CRNDE-h, miR-19a-3p, 21-5p, 425-5p, 17-92a | ExoScreen | Upregulation in cancer patients | [ | ||
| miR-4772-3p | qRT-PCR | Lower level causes cancer recurrence | [ | ||
| let-7a, miR150, 1246, 1229, 223, 21, 23a | qRT-PCR | let-7a binds KRAS and inhibits cancer, miR-21 downregulates p53 | [ | ||
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| Prostate cancer | Serum | LncRNA-p21, miR-21, 375 | qRT-PCR | Elevation in prostate cancer patients | [ |
| PSA, PSMA, P-glycoprotein | qRT-PCR | Elevation causes castration-resident prostate cancer | [ | ||
| miR-1246 | Western blot | Overexpression leads to positive metastasis | [ | ||
| TM256, LAMTOR1, VATL, ADIRF, survivin | qRT-PCR | VATL increases metastasis, LAMTOR1 regulates mTOR signaling | [ | ||
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| Pancreatic cancer | Serum | Glypican-1 | GFP | Increased levels in pancreatic cancer patient's upregulation in 83% of pancreatic cancer patients | [ |
| CD44, V6, Tspan8, EpCAM, CD104 | ELISA | CD44v6 target MET and VEFGR-2 pathways to promote metastasis | [ | ||
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| Non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) | Plasma | miR-302c, 302a, 126 | Western blot | Elevation in cancer patients | [ |
| Bronchoalveolar lavage | EML4-ALK | Electron microscopy | |||
| miR 181-5p, 30a-3p, 361-5p, 15b-5p, 320b, 30e-3p | Nanoparticle tracking analysis | ||||
| EpCAM, NY-ESO-1, Alix, PLAP, miR-24 | miRNA-seq | EFGR mutation leads to metastasis, miR-24 targets Jab1/CSN5 to promote tumorigenesis | [ | ||
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| Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) | Plasma | CD34 | Immunoaffinity capture | Elevated CD34+ exosomes in AML patients | [ |
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| Cervical cancer | Cervicovaginal lavage specimens | miR-21, 146a | qRT-PCR | Elevation in HPV+ patients | [ |
| Survivin | qRT-PCR | Suppress genotoxic-induced stress apoptosis and enhance proliferation | [ | ||
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| Bladder cancer | Serum | Lnc-UCA1 | qRT-PCR | Elevated expression in BC patients | [ |
| EDIL-3 | Western blot | Tumor progression via activation of EFGR | [ | ||