| Literature DB >> 32709086 |
Aneta Zebrowska1, Piotr Widlak1, Theresa Whiteside2,3, Monika Pietrowska1.
Abstract
Small extracellular vesicles (sEV or exosomes) are nanovesicles (30-150 nm) released both in vivo and in vitro by most cell types. Tumor cells produce sEV called TEX and disperse them throughout all body fluids. TEX contain a cargo of proteins, lipids, and RNA that is similar but not identical to that of the "parent" producer cell (i.e., the cargo of exosomes released by melanoma cells is similar but not identical to exosomes released by melanocytes), possibly due to selective endosomal packaging. TEX and their role in cancer biology have been intensively investigated largely due to the possibility that TEX might serve as key component of a "liquid tumor biopsy." TEX are also involved in the crosstalk between cancer and immune cells and play a key role in the suppression of anti-tumor immune responses, thus contributing to the tumor progression. Most of the available information about the TEX molecular composition and functions has been gained using sEV isolated from supernatants of cancer cell lines. However, newer data linking plasma levels of TEX with cancer progression have focused attention on TEX in the patients' peripheral circulation as potential biomarkers of cancer diagnosis, development, activity, and response to therapy. Here, we consider the molecular cargo and functions of TEX as potential biomarkers of one of the most fatal malignancies-melanoma. Studies of TEX in plasma of patients with melanoma offer the possibility of an in-depth understanding of the melanoma biology and response to immune therapies. This review features melanoma cell-derived exosomes (MTEX) with special emphasis on exosome-mediated signaling between melanoma cells and the host immune system.Entities:
Keywords: biomarkers; melanoma cell-derived exosomes (MTEX); proteomics; small extracellular vesicles (sEV); tumor microenvironment; tumor-derived exosomes (TEX)
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32709086 PMCID: PMC7404104 DOI: 10.3390/ijms21145066
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Role of tumor-derived small extracellular vesicles (sEV) (TEX) in cancer biology. Tumor-derived exosomes (TEX) are involved in intercellular signaling and communication between tumor cells and non-malignant cells residing in the tumor microenvironment. TEX reprogram these cells to acquire functions favoring tumor growth and metastasis. TEX-induced changes include enhancing cancer immune escape, remodeling of the tumor stroma, molecular and metabolic reprogramming, and promotion of angiogenesis. Green arrows indicate the processes stimulated by TEX. Red lines with blunt ends indicate processes inhibited by TEX.
Proteomics Profiling of Melanoma Cell-Derived Exosomes (MTEX) Released in Vitro by Melanoma Cell Lines.
| Cell Line | Method of MTEX Purification and Characterization | MS Approach | Major Findings | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| MeWo, SK-MEL-28 (human) | UC/TEM, WB, 1D/2D SDS-PAGE | MALDI-TOF MS/MS | A few proteins identified in MTEX for the first time: prostaglandin regulatory-like protein (PGRL), p120 catenin, syntaxin-binding proteins 1 and 2, septin 2 (Nedd5), ezrin, radixin, tryptophan/aspartic acid (WD) repeat-containing protein 1 | [ |
| A375 (human) | UC/TEM, NTA, WB | LC-MS/MS | Different sets of proteins present in MTEX and melanocyte-derived EV, including annexin A1, HAPLN1, GRP78, endoplasmin precursor (gp 96), TUBA1B, PYGB), ferritin, heavy polypeptide 1 (MTEX-upregulated), annexin A2, syntenin-1, MFGE8, OXCT (MTEX-downregulated) | [ |
| MNT-1, G1, 501 mel, SKMEL28, Daju, A375M, 1205Lu (human) | UC+SEC/WB, TEM, NTA | nanoLC-MS/MS | Different sets of proteins present in MTEX from nontumorigenic, tumorigenic, and metastatic cell lines, including EGFR, PTK2/FAK1, EPHB2, SRC, LGALS1/LEG1, LGALS3/LEG3, NT5E/5NTD-CD73, NRAS, KIT, MCAM/MUC18, MET specific for metastatic cell lines | [ |
| B16-F1 (murine) | UC+SEC/CEM, DLS, IA-FCM | uHPLC-MS | 10 most abundant proteins: CD81, CD9, histones (H2A, H2B, H3.1, H4), heat shock proteins (HSPA5/GRP78, HSC71), syntetin-1 | [ |
| B16-F10 (murine) | UC+SEC, UF+SEC/TEM, NTA, WB | nanoLC-MS/MS | Different sets of proteins identified in low- and high-density MTEX, including ACTN4 and CCNY enriched in LD-MTEX and EPHA2 enriched in HD-MTEX | [ |
| Mel501 (human) | UC+SEC/WB, CM | RPLC-MS/MS | Different sets of proteins identified in MTEX released in neutral and acidic environment (pH 6.7 and 6.0, respectively), including HRAS, NRAS, TIMP3, HSP90AB1, HSP90B1, HSPAIL, HSPA5, GANAB, gelsolin, and cofilin upregulated in acidic conditions. | [ |
Abbreviations: methods of EX purification: UC—ultracentrifugation, UF—ultrafiltration, SEC—size-exclusion chromatography; methods of EX characterization: NTA—nanoparticle tracking analysis, DLS—dynamic light scattering, TEM—transmission electron microscopy, CEM—cryo-electron microscopy, CM—confocal microscopy, WB—Western blotting.
Figure 2Pleiotropic effect of MTEX on melanoma biology.