| Literature DB >> 31447954 |
Tomofumi Yamamoto1,2,3,4, Nobuyoshi Kosaka1,3, Takahiro Ochiya1,4.
Abstract
Extracellular vesicles (EVs) are small membraned vesicles and approximately 50-150 nm in diameter. Almost all of the type of cells releases the EVs and circulates in the body fluids. EVs contain multiple functional components, such as mRNAs, microRNAs (miRNAs), DNAs, and proteins, which can be transferred to the recipient cells, resulting in phenotypic changes. Recently, EV research has focused on their potential as a drug delivery vehicle and in targeted therapy against specific molecules. Moreover, some surface proteins are specific to particular diseases, and therefore, EVs also have promise as biomarkers. In this concise review, we summarize the latest research focused on EVs, which have the potential to become a promising drug delivery method, biomarker, and new therapeutic target for improving the outcomes of cancer patients.Entities:
Keywords: 30 Bio-inspired and biomedical materials; 600 Others; EV-based therapy; Extracellular vesicles; biomarker; drug delivery system; exosomes
Year: 2019 PMID: 31447954 PMCID: PMC6691912 DOI: 10.1080/14686996.2019.1629835
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Technol Adv Mater ISSN: 1468-6996 Impact factor: 8.090
Figure 1.EV production procedure.
Exosomes, 50–150 nm, are initially formed by a process of inward budding in early endosomes to form multivesicular bodies. Microvesicles are larger than exosomes, approximately 100–1000 nm. They are composed of lipid components and are directly shed or budded from plasma membranes. RAB proteins (RAB27A, RAB27B), ESCRT (Alix, TSG101) are associated with EV secretion. There are some markers on EV membranes, which is useful to detect EVs. EVs vary in size, properties, and secretion pathway depending on the originated cells, and the EVs are indeed taken up by recipient cells via a variety of mechanisms. Electron microscopy indicates the EVs derived from MCF7 breast cancer cell lines.
Comparison of the advantages and disadvantages of various EV isolation methods.
| Method | Advantage | Disadvantage | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ultracentrifugation & differential ultracentrifugation | Most common method, isolation from large sample volumes and multiple samples, no additional reagents | Time consuming procedure, EVs damaged from high speed centrifugation, contamination of non-EV fraction | [ |
| Density gradient centrifugation (sucrose or iodixanol gradients) | High purity, no additional reagents | Complex procedure, loss of samples, affected by ultracentrifugation time | [ |
| Size-exclusion chromatography | High purity and high reproducibility, reduced sample loss and EV aggregation, no additional reagents | Limitation on sample volumes, complex procedure, necessity of additional equipment, only one sample in each column, high cost | [ |
| Polymer-based precipitation | Low cost, simple procedure, | Contamination and retention of the polymer | [ |
| Antibody-coated immunobead method | High purity and high selectivity | Difficulty with detachment of the molecules, non-sopecific binding, existence of intact EVs, high cost | [ |
| Ultrafiltration | Simple and fast procedure, the ability to process many samples simultaneously, no additional reagents | Loss of samples, contamination, poor biological activity | [ |
| Microfluidic methods | High purity and efficiency, | Complexity of devices, necessity of additional equipment, high cost | [ |
Figure 2.Communication in the tumor microenvironment via EVs.
Intercellular communication via EVs contributes to various phases of tumor progression through the transfer of their components, such as, miRNAs, mRNAs, DNAs and proteins.
Figure 3.ExoScreen method is suitable for liquid biopsy.
In this method, EVs are captured by two types of antibodies and detected by photosensitizer-beads, which enable the detection of EVs without sample purification in a small volume of body fluids or conditioned medium. The combination of antibody against EV specific marker and antibody against cancer-specific marker enable to detect the cancer-specific EV.
Figure 4.EVs are a powerful and promising tool for cancer therapy.
EVs have potential as biomarkers, drug delivery vehicles, and new targets in cancer therapy. To use EVs for liquid biopsy, an easier and lower-cost method is needed. Low encapsulation ratio is the most significant issue for the use of EVs as a DDS carrier. There are still some issues to be solved to start EV-based therapy. EV-targeting therapy is very promising, because the pathways promoted by EVs are completely different from those targeted by existing anticancer drugs; however, the elucidation of cancer-specific EV secretory pathways or cancer-specific antigens on EVs is needed.