| Literature DB >> 31523187 |
Xiao-Yu Guo1, Fan Xiao1, Jie Li1, Yi-Nan Zhou2, Wang-Jun Zhang1, Bei Sun1, Gang Wang1.
Abstract
Pancreatic disease, including pathologies such as acute pancreatitis (AP), chronic pancreatitis (CP), and pancreatic cancer (PC), is a complicated and dangerous clinical condition involving the disruption of exocrine or endocrine function. PC has one of the highest mortality rates among cancers due to insufficient diagnosis in early stages. Furthermore, efficient treatment options for the disease etiologies of AP and CP are lacking. Thus, the identification of new therapeutic targets and reliable biomarkers is required. As essential couriers in intercellular communication, exosomes have recently been confirmed to play an important role in pancreatic disease, but the specific underlying mechanisms are unknown. Herein, we summarize the current knowledge of exosomes in pancreatic disease with respect to diagnosis, molecular mechanisms, and treatment, proposing new ideas for the study of pancreatic disease.Entities:
Keywords: Acute pancreatitis; Chronic pancreatitis; Exosomes; Noncoding RNA; Pancreatic cancer
Year: 2019 PMID: 31523187 PMCID: PMC6743302 DOI: 10.7150/ijbs.35823
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Biol Sci ISSN: 1449-2288 Impact factor: 6.580
Figure 1The role of exosomes in AP-related lung injury. The figure shows that the pancreas can release exosomes during AP (yellow circles, solid lines). Some exosomes directly reach the liver via the portal system, but most are largely retained in hepatic tissue. Another subset of exosomes released into PAAF are degraded by the hydrolytic activity of PAAF (white circles, dotted lines) and finally return to the hepatic tissue. In addition, the liver possibly generates and releases new exosomes during AP (red circles, solid lines). The exosomes can reach the alveolar compartment and transform alveolar macrophages into a proinflammatory phenotype. Moreover, AP circulating exosomes can markedly increase the expression of the proinflammatory cytokines IL-1β and IL-6 and the chemokine CCL2.
Figure 2Exosome-mediated positive feedback loop during CP. The figure shows a positive feedback loop between PSCs and PSC-derived exosomes during CP. PSCs can release exosomes containing miR-21 and CCN-2, and these exosomes can activate PSCs to generate more exosomes and collagen α1. This loop can accelerate the development of pancreatic fibrosis during CP.
Figure 3Various effects of exosomes on PC progression.
Reported exosomal PC biomarkers
| Exosomal Biomarkers | Exosome Isolation Method | Sample | Sensitivity Specificity | Efficacy | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| miR-17-5p | Ultracentrifugation | Human serum | 72.7%; 92.6% | Discriminating PC from non-PC and healthy individuals | |
| miR-10b | Ultracentrifugation | Human plasma | 100%; 100% | Superior to exosomal GPC1 or CA19-9 in diagnosis of PDAC and differentiating between PDAC and CP | |
| Combination miRs and and PC-initiating cells markers | Sucros-gradient centrifugation | Human serum | 100%; 80% | Allowing for a highly sensitive and minimally invasive PC diagnostics | |
| hsa-miR-550 | Surface acoustic wave (SAW)-driven exosomes lysis | PC cell media | Not tested | Time saving, smaller sample volume needed, and minimal sample loss for PC diagnosis. | |
| miR-10b (by ultrasensitive localized surface plasmon resonance (LSPR)-based microRNA sensor) | Sequential Ultracentrifugations | PC cell media | Not tested | Novel diagnostic strategies for PC based on direct quantitative measurement of plasma and exosome microRNAs | |
| miRNAs | Exosomes track-etched magnetic nanopore (TENPO) | Mice plasma | Not tested | Distinguishing mice with PDAC from either healthy mice or thoses with pre-cancerous lesions | |
| exoDNA | Ultracentrifugation | Human plasma and pleural effusion | Not tested | Detecting alterations in NOTCH1 and BRCA2 in exoDNA data and PC neoantigens-related fusion genes in exoRNA data | |
| exoDNA | Ultracentrifugation | Human serum | Not tested | More suitable for assessment of PC risk | |
| Proteoglycan Glypican-1 | Ultracentrifugation | Human serum | 100%; 100% | Discriminating almost each stage of PC (carcinoma in situ, stage I as well as stages II-IV) from BPD and healthy controls | |
| Zinc transporter protein 4 (ZIP4) | SBI ExoQuick-TC kit | Human serum | Not tested | Obviously higher level in PC group than BPD group and biliary disease group and healthy group | |
| A disintegrin and metalloproteases (ADAM) 10 and 17 | SBI ExoQuick-TC kit | PC cell media | Not tested | Potential for PC diagnosis | |
| Soluble epidermal growth factor receptor (sEGFR) | Ultracentrifugation | PC cell media | Not tested | Indicative of PC diagnosis and tracking response to therapy. | |
| Macrophage migration inhibitory factor (MIF) | Ultracentrifugation | PC cell media | Not tested | Predicting metastasis and prognosis of PDAC | |
| MIF | The PDA chip and PEARL SERS Tag-based exosomes sensors | PC cell media | Not tested | Distinguishing metastatic from non-metastasis PC, and P1-2 stages from P3 stage PC, without the need of histopathological examination |