| Literature DB >> 32089744 |
Bairen Pang1,2, Ying Zhu1,2, Jie Ni1,2, James Thompson1,3,4, David Malouf2,3, Joseph Bucci1,2, Peter Graham1,2, Yong Li1,2,5.
Abstract
Prostate cancer (PCa) is a leading cause of cancer death for males in western countries. The current gold standard for PCa diagnosis - template needle biopsies - often does not convey a true representation of the molecular profile given sampling error and complex tumour heterogeneity. Presently available biomarker blood tests have limited accuracy. There is a growing demand for novel diagnostic approaches to reduce both the number of men with an abnormal PSA/ DRE who undergo invasive biopsy and the number of cores collected per biopsy. 'Liquid biopsy' is a minimally invasive biofluid-based approach that has the potential to provide information and improve the accuracy of diagnosis for patients' treatment selection, prognostic counselling and development of risk-adjusted follow-up protocols. Extracellular vesicles (EVs) are lipid bilayer-delimited particles released by tumour cells which may provide a real-time snapshot of the entire tumour in a non-invasive way. EVs can regulate physiological processes and mediate systemic dissemination of various types of cancers. Emerging evidence suggests that EVs have crucial roles in PCa development and metastasis. Most importantly, EVs are directly derived from their parent cells with their information. EVs contain components including proteins, mRNAs, DNA fragments, non-coding RNAs and lipids, and play a critical role in intercellular communication. Therefore, EVs hold promise for the discovery of liquid biopsy-based biomarkers for PCa diagnosis. Here, we review the current approaches for EV isolation and analysis, summarise the recent advances in EV protein biomarkers in PCa and focus on liquid biopsy-based EV biomarkers in PCa diagnosis for personalised medicine. © The author(s).Entities:
Keywords: biomarker; diagnosis; extracellular vesicles; liquid biopsy; prostate cancer
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32089744 PMCID: PMC7019149 DOI: 10.7150/thno.39486
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Theranostics ISSN: 1838-7640 Impact factor: 11.556
Summary of common EV isolation approaches in PCa
| Isolation Method | Mechanism | Advantage | Limitation | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mass and density | Large sample capacity, low following cost, low background contamination (with density gradient-based approach) | Low efficiency for small sample volume, high capital cost, time-consuming, unexpected aggregation, protein lost | ||
| Surface charge or solubility change | Very easy handling, scalable, does not deform EVs | High background contamination for complex component sample (e.g. blood). Chemicals (polyethylene glycols or similar) used may impair downstream analysis | ||
| Size | Cut-off specific particle size, fast, less deformation of EVs | Limited filter lifetime, extra cleaning step, extra force, protein contamination | ||
| Size and molecular weight | Continuous operation, fraction population for further analysis | Extra force applied to the field, protein contamination | ||
| Size and molecular weight | No extra force involved, does not deform EVs, can remove high-density lipoprotein (HDL) | Contamination from particles with similar size | ||
| Affinity binding | Specific interaction to the target, high purity | Pre-purification or combination steps may be needed, not for large scale | ||
| Size, density or affinity binding | Low sample amount, fast, isolation and analysis can be integrated | Not suitable for large scale, specific design required, low EV yield |
Summary of EV protein biomarkers identified in PCa for clinical diagnosis
| Putative PCa marker | Human sample | EV source | Markers for EV identification | EV isolation | Stage of the disease | Main result | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CK18 | PCa patients (n=6), healthy controls (n=5) | Plasma, cell line (DU145) | CD81, TSG101 | UC; Precipitation | N/A | CK18 were significantly enriched in EVs and in line with CK18 IHC in human PCa tissues | |
| PSA | PCa patients (n=15), BHP patients (n=15), healthy controls (n=15) | Plasma, cell line (LNCaP) | CD81, TSG101 | UC | Prostate adenocarcinoma, | LNCaP EVs express significant levels of PSA | |
| PTEN | PCa patients (n=30), healthy controls (n=8) | Plasma, cell lines (DU145, PC-3, U87, HAOEC, HAOSMC, HPEC) | Flotilin-1 | UC | Advanced (T3/T4) tumour stage | PTEN was detected in PCa cell/plasma exosomes instead of normal cell/plasma exosomes | |
| PSMA | PCa patients (n=82), BPH patients (n=28) | Plasma | CD63 | Precipitation | Low- (n = 17); intermediate- (n = 36); | PSMA EVs concentration was higher in PCa than BPH | |
| Survivin | PCa patients (n=39), BPH patients (n=20), healthy controls (n=16) | Plasma; serum | Lamp1 | UC; Precipitation | Plasma: ten low-grade PCa cases (GS 6); | Survivin existed in plasma exosomes of normal, BPH and PCa | |
| GGT | PCa patients (n=31), BPH patients (n=8) | Serum, cell lines (LNCaP, C4, C4-2, C4-2B) | CD9, PDCD6IP | UC, Size-Exclusion Chromatography, Immunoaffinity intonations | PCa patients: PSA: 4.20-28.23 ng/mL | GGT1 was elevated in exosomes isolated from C4-2 and C4-2B cells | |
| P-gp | CRPC patients (6 therapy-naïve and 4 clinically docetaxel-resistant PCa patients) | Serum, cell lines (PC-3, PC3-R) | CD9 | UC | 6 therapy-naïve: PSA: 1.481-7.875 ng/mL, GS 6-8; | P-gp was higher in PC-3R exosomes than PC-3 | |
| δ-Catenin, caveolin-1, CD59 | PCa patients (n=16) | Urine, Cell lines (PC-3, CWR22Rv-1) | UC | PSA: 0.3-667 ng/mL, GS 6-8 | δ-Catenin, caveolin-1, CD59 were detected in cell-free urine EVs | ||
| FABP5 | PCa patients (n=30), negative control group* (n=17) | Urine, cell lines (PC3, DU145) | CD9, CD63, CD81 | UC | GS6, PSA: 4.1-126 (n=6); | FABP5 was overexpressed in PCa EVs compared to negative control group | |
| TMEM256- LAMTOR1, ADIRF, VATL, Rab, PSA, FOLH1/ PMSA, TGM4, TMPRSS | PCa patients (n=17), healthy controls (n=15) | Urine | CD9, CD81, TSG101 | UC | GS6-9, PSA: 4.5-23 (n=16); | Combined TMEM256- LAMTOR1 augmented the sensitivity to 100% with AUC= 0.94 | |
| PARK7- Flotillin 2 | PCa patients (n=26), healthy controls (n=16) | Urine | N/A | UC | GS6-8, PSA: 4.4-22.6 (n=26) | Flotillin 1, Flotillin 2, Rab3B can be used to separate PCa and healthy males | |
| ADSV-TGM4, | PCa patients (n=53), BPH patients (n=54) | Urine | CD81, TSG101, RaB5 | UC | Low-grade PCa GS ≤ 7 (3+4) (n=22); | Combination of protein panel improved the ability to distinguish benign from PCa samples | |
| ITGA3, ITGB1 | Metastatic PCa patients (n=3), PCa patients (n=5), BPH patients (n=5) | Urine, cell lines (LNCaP, PC3) | PDCD6IP | UC | Metastatic PCa patients (n=3); PCa patients (n=5), | ITGA3 showed low level in LNCaP exosomes and was hardly detectable in PC3 exosomes. |
Notes: *The “negative” group comprised the patients who received prostate biopsy due to elevated PSA levels and were diagnosed pathologically as negative. Abbreviations: ADIRF : adipogenesis regulatory factor; ADSV: Adseverin; AUC, Area under the curve; BPH: benign prostatic hyperplasia; PCa, prostate cancer; CD9: CD9 molecule; CD63: CD63 molecule; CD81: CD81 molecule; CK18, cytokeratin 18; CRPC, Castration-resistant prostate cancer; ELISA: enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays; EVs: Extracellular vesicles; FABP5: Fatty acid binding protein 5; GGT: Gamma-glutamyltransferase; GLPK5: Putative glycerol kinase 5; GS, Gleason score; IHC, Immunohistochemistry; ITGA3: Integrin subunit alpha 3; ITGB1: Integrin Subunit Beta 1; LAMTOR1: Late endosomal/lysosomal adaptor, MAPK and MTOR activator 1; N/A: not applicable; PARK7: Parkinsonism associated deglycase; PAP: Prostatic acid phosphatase; PDCD6IP: programmed cell death 6 interacting protein; P-gp: P-glycoprotein; PSA, Prostate specific antigen; PSMA, Prostate-specific membrane antigen; PTEN: Phosphatase and tensin homolog; RaB5: RAB5A, member RAS oncogene family; RAB3B: RAB3B, member RAS oncogene family; SPHM: N-sulphoglucosamine sulphohydrolase; TGM4: Transglutaminase-4; TMEM256: Transmembrane protein 256; TMPRSS: transmembrane protease, serine 2; TSG101: Tumour susceptibility gene 101; VATL: V-type proton ATPase 16 kDa proteolipid subunit