| Literature DB >> 32414045 |
Rahul Sanwlani1, Pamali Fonseka1, Sai V Chitti1, Suresh Mathivanan1.
Abstract
Milk is considered as more than a source of nutrition for infants and is a vector involved in the transfer of bioactive compounds and cells. Milk contains abundant quantities of extracellular vesicles (EVs) that may originate from multiple cellular sources. These nanosized vesicles have been well characterized and are known to carry a diverse cargo of proteins, nucleic acids, lipids and other biomolecules. Milk-derived EVs have been demonstrated to survive harsh and degrading conditions in gut, taken up by various cell types, cross biological barriers and reach peripheral tissues. The cargo carried by these dietary EVs has been suggested to have a role in cell growth, development, immune modulation and regulation. Hence, there is considerable interest in understanding the role of milk-derived EVs in mediating inter-organismal and cross-species communication. Furthermore, various attributes such as it being a natural source, as well as its abundance, scalability, economic viability and lack of unwarranted immunologic reactions, has generated significant interest in deploying milk-derived EVs for clinical applications such as drug delivery and disease therapy. In this review, the role of milk-derived EVs in inter-organismal, cross-species communication and in drug delivery is discussed.Entities:
Keywords: animal extracellular vesicles; cellular crosstalk; cross-species communication; drug delivery; exosomes; extracellular vesicle proteome; extracellular vesicle-based therapy; interindividual communication; milk extracellular vesicles
Year: 2020 PMID: 32414045 PMCID: PMC7356197 DOI: 10.3390/proteomes8020011
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proteomes ISSN: 2227-7382
Figure 1EV subtypes and role in mediating cellular crosstalk. Schematic representation of three main EV subtypes; (A) exosomes, (B) microvesicles, (C) apoptotic bodies released by all cell types into the extracellular space. Exosomes and microvesicles are released by live cells via exocytosis and outward budding, respectively. Apoptotic bodies, on the contrary, are released by apoptotic cells. EVs are known to mediate intercellular communication by carrying a diverse cargo of proteins, nucleic acids and lipids from the donor cell to the recipient. Adapted from [1].
Figure 2Milk EVs; source and role in cross-species inter-individual communication. (A). Milk EVs are highly heterogenous and are secreted into the milk by a variety of cells residing in the source organism’s mammary gland; mammary epithelial cells, immune cells, stem cells, bacteria and adipocytes. These vesicles are distinct from the MFGs and carry a diverse cargo of bioactive compounds. (B) Upon milk consumption, these EVs can survive the harsh, degrading conditions of recipient’s gut. These EVs are then either taken up by the IECs (transendocytosis) or pass through the leaky epithelial gut (paracellular translocation), eventually entering the systemic circulation.
Figure 3Schematic representation of differences in milk-derived EVs between raw and commercial milk. Raw milk from various species undergoes numerous processing steps before commercialization. These processes; homogenization, heat treatment, cold storage, skimming and nutritional supplementation lead to variations in milk-derived EVs. The isolated EVs from raw and commercial milk may thus differ in abundance, composition and cargo.
Summary of proteomics studies for milk-derived EVs from various species.
| Milk Source | Main Proteins Implicated | Method of Isolation and Characterization | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bovine | Butyrophillin, Xanthine Oxidase, Adipophilin, | Differential centrifugation, ultracentrifugation, sucrose gradient, LC-MS/MS | [ |
| Bovine | Butyrophillin, | Differential centrifugation, ultracentrifugation, | [ |
| Human | CD9, Annexin A5, Flotillin-1, CD83, CD81, Lactadherin, Syntenin, Rab, Ras-related proteins | Differential centrifugation, ultracentrifugation, | [ |
| Horse | CD81, CD63 receptors, Beta-Lactoglobulin, Lactadherin, Butyrophillin, Lactoferrin, Xanthine dehydrogenase | Differential centrifugation, ultracentrifugation, | [ |
| Porcine | CD9, CD63, HSPs, Lactadherin, Butyrophillin, Adipophilin, Xanthine oxidase | Differential centrifugation, ultracentrifugation, | [ |
| Human | MHC II, CD81, MUC-1, HSPs, CD63, Butyrophillin, Lactadherin | Differential centrifugation, ultracentrifugation, | [ |
| Bovine | Butyrophillin, Xanthine Oxidase, Adipophilin, | Differential centrifugation, ultracentrifugation, | [ |
Summary of transcriptomics studies of milk-derived EVs from various species.
| Milk Source | Biomolecule (Number) | Implication | Method of Isolation | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Human | miRNA (602) | Immunoregulatory, | Differential centrifugation, ExoQuick exosome precipitation | [ |
| Bovine | miRNA (27) | Immune modulation | Differential centrifugation, ultracentrifugation, sucrose gradient | [ |
| Bovine | mRNA (19,320), miRNA (79) | Immune modulation | Differential centrifugation, ultracentrifugation | [ |
| Bovine | miRNA (417) | Immunoregulation | Differential centrifugation, ultracentrifugation, sucrose gradient | [ |
| Porcine | mRNA (19,230) | Metabolism, signalling pathways | Differential centrifugation, ultracentrifugation, sucrose gradient | [ |
| Human | miRNA (330, 308) | Early infant development | Differential centrifugation, ExoQuick-TC | [ |
| Bovine | miRNA (69) | Signalling pathways | Differential centrifugation, ultrafiltration, ExoEasy Maxi Kit | [ |
| Bovine | miRNA (334) | Gene expression regulation | Differential centrifugation, ultracentrifugation, ultrafiltration | [ |
Figure 4Milk EV cargo guides pathophysiological processes. The cargo of proteins, nucleic acids and lipids sequestered in milk EVs is known to mediate phenotypic changes in the recipient cells. The complexity of the cargo and the EV heterogeneity enables milk EVs to mediate an array of processes relating to; (A) immunoregulation, (B) cellular physiology, (C) growth and development and (D) diseases.
Figure 5Milk EVs can be engineered to be used as drug-delivery system. Schematic representation of the (A) advantages of using milk EVs as drug-delivery system and (B) macromolecules that can be packaged and delivered via milk EVs. The nanosized vesicles, other than their intrinsic cargo, can also serve to deliver a variety of molecules including chemotherapeutic and anti-inflammatory drugs, recombinant proteins, peptides and nucleic acids. These EVs can be engineered to target specific sites of interest with the help of targeting ligands and lipids on their surface.