| Literature DB >> 31918262 |
Savvas Petanidis1, Kalliopi Domvri2, Konstantinos Porpodis2, Doxakis Anestakis3, Lutz Freitag4, Wolfgang Hohenforst-Schmidt5, Drosos Tsavlis6, Konstantinos Zarogoulidis7.
Abstract
Immunosuppressive chemoresistance is a major challenge in lung cancer treatment. Exosomes present in the tumor microenviroment are implicated in chemoresistant-related immune suppression, and metastasis but the exact pathogenic role of lung-derived exosomes is still uncertain. Recent reports reveal that lung cancer pathogenesis is strictly associated with a exosomal tumor supportive status and a dysfunctional immune system. In this study, we investigate the role of Kras-derived exosomes in chemoresistant immunosuppression in which neoplastic cells create a metabolic-sustained microenvironment. Findings reveal that Kras-derived exosomes induce regulation of SMARCE1/NCOR1 chromatin remodeling genes promoting pre-metastatic niche formation in naive mice and consequently increase lung metastatic burden. Furthermore, exosomal Kras inhibition downregulated transcription factor BACH2/GATA-3 expression in lung tumor tissues by shifting pyruvate/PKM2 dependent metabolism, contributing to a tumor-restraining status. Further co-treatment with carboplatin triggered RIP3/TNFa dependent necroptosis in ex vivo cells accompanied by differential expression of immunosuppressive miR-146/miR-210 regulators in metastatic lung cancer patients. Overall, these findings demonstrate the multifaceted roles of Kras-derived exosomes in sustaining lung immunosuppressive metastasis and provide new opportunities for effective metastasis inhibition, especially in chemoresistant tumors.Entities:
Keywords: BACH2; Exosomes; Kras; Necroptosis; miR-146/miR-210
Year: 2019 PMID: 31918262 DOI: 10.1016/j.biopha.2019.109461
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Pharmacother ISSN: 0753-3322 Impact factor: 6.529