| Literature DB >> 32746854 |
Amir B Ghaemmaghami1, Maryam Mahjoubin-Tehran2,3, Ahmad Movahedpour4,5, Korosh Morshedi6, Amirhossein Sheida6, Seyed Pouya Taghavi6, Hamed Mirzaei7, Michael R Hamblin8,9.
Abstract
Malignant gliomas are the most common and deadly type of central nervous system tumors. Despite some advances in treatment, the mean survival time remains only about 1.25 years. Even after surgery, radiotherapy and chemotherapy, gliomas still have a poor prognosis. Exosomes are the most common type of extracellular vesicles with a size range of 30 to 100 nm, and can act as carriers of proteins, RNAs, and other bioactive molecules. Exosomes play a key role in tumorigenesis and resistance to chemotherapy or radiation. Recent evidence has shown that exosomal microRNAs (miRNAs) can be detected in the extracellular microenvironment, and can also be transferred from cell to cell via exosome secretion and uptake. Therefore, many recent studies have focused on exosomal miRNAs as important cellular regulators in various physiological and pathological conditions. A variety of exosomal miRNAs have been implicated in the initiation and progression of gliomas, by activating and/or inhibiting different signaling pathways. Exosomal miRNAs could be used as therapeutic agents to modulate different biological processes in gliomas. Exosomal miRNAs derived from mesenchymal stem cells could also be used for glioma treatment. The present review summarizes the exosomal miRNAs that have been implicated in the pathogenesis, diagnosis and treatment of gliomas. Moreover, exosomal proteins could also be involved in glioma pathogenesis. Exosomal miRNAs and proteins could also serve as non-invasive biomarkers for prognosis and disease monitoring. Video Abstract.Entities:
Keywords: Biomarkers; Exosomes; Gliomas; MicroRNAs; Proteins; Therapy; pathogenesis
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32746854 PMCID: PMC7397575 DOI: 10.1186/s12964-020-00623-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Commun Signal ISSN: 1478-811X Impact factor: 7.525
Fig. 1A schematic of exosome formation. Exosome formation is divided into two main pathways: ‘classical’ and ‘direct’. The ‘direct pathway’ involves exosome formation via direct exocytosis of vesicles, such as MVs originating from the external budding of the plasma membrane. The ‘classical pathway’ requires the re-activation of endosomes that originated from the internal budding of the plasma membrane. This pathway results in MVE. Following the active packaging of their components, MVE can fuse with the plasma membrane, and exosomes will then be released to the extracellular space. Exosomes are composed of a lipid bilayer and contain non-coding miRNAs, transmembrane and cytoplasmic proteins, and single-stranded and double-stranded DNA sequences. Exosomes contain proteins such as tetraspanins, ALIX, class-I and -II MHC molecules, and tumor-derived neo-antigens. ALIX: ALG-2 interacting protein X; ESCRT: Endosomal sorting complexes required for transport; LE/MVB: late endosome/multivesicular body; ILV: Intralumenal vesicle; MHC: Major histocompatibility complex; MVE: multi-vesicular endosomes; NEF: Negative Regulatory Factor. Figure adapted from [25]
Fig. 2Biogenesis of exosomes within the parent cell and uptake of exosomes by the recipient cell. Vesicular pathways and miRNA/mRNA pathways come together because some RNA molecules are bound within the endosomal limiting membrane in the cytoplasm. RBPs (RNA-binding proteins) translocate miRNA strands into MVBs (multivesicular bodies) for exosome encapsulation, or to the cell membrane for further release. During maturation, the endosomes are transported to the TGN (trans-Golgi network) where they either undergo lysosomal degradation or secrete their intraluminal vesicles (ILVs) via microtubules towards the plasma membrane. Parent cell exosomes may carry out juxtacrine signaling, fusion or endocytosis in order to interact with the recipient cells. Parent cells secrete microvesicles into the extracellular matrix, by outward budding from the cell surface. Figure adapted from [32]
Role of exosomal miRNAs in gliomas
| Exosomal microRNA | Expression status | Target | Notes | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| miR-301a | Up | TCEAL7 | TCEAL7 is a tumor suppressor in GBM. TCEAL7 is able to modulate the Wnt/β-catenin pathway by blocking β-catenin translocation from the cytoplasm to the nucleus. | [ |
| miR-151a | Up | XRCC4 | miR-151a reduces XRCC4 levels, induces delay of DSB clearance and encourages cells to become sensitive to TMZ. | [ |
| miR-1238 | Up | CAV1 | The loss of miR-1238 can sensitize resistant GBM cells by directly targeting the CAV1/EGFR pathway. | [ |
| mir-5096 | Down | Kir4.1, AQP-4 | miR-5096 was down-regulated in gliomas. | [ |
| miR-148a | Down | CADM1 | miR-148a promotes proliferation and metastasis via targeting CADM1 to activate the STAT3 pathway. | [ |
| miR-29a | Up | Hbp1 | miR-29a was up-regulated in gliomas. | [ |
| miR-92a | Up | Prkar1a | miR-92a was up-regulated in gliomas. | [ |
| miR-133b | Down | EZH2 | miR-133b represses proliferation, invasion, and migration by inhibiting EZH2 and the Wnt/β-catenin signaling pathway. | [ |
| miR-199a | Down | AGAP2 | miR-199a inhibits glioma progression by down-regulating AGAP2 | [ |
| miRNA-584-5p | Up | CYP2J2 | miRNA-584-5p reduces proliferation and invasion of glioma cells. | [ |
| miR-9 | Up | COL18A1, THBS2, PTCH1 and PHD3 | miR-9 increases angiogenesis. | [ |
| miR-10a and miR-21 | Up | RORA, PTEN | The hypoxia-inducible expression of miR-10a and miR-21 in GDEs mediates MDSC expansion and activation by targeting RAR-related orphan receptor alpha (RORA) and phosphatase and tensin homolog (PTEN). | [ |
| miR-21, miR-222 and miR-124-3p | Up | – | miR-21, miR-222 and miR-124-3p were up-regulated in gliomas. | [ |
| miR-125b | Up | – | miR-125b was up-regulated in gliomas | [ |
| mir-21 | Up | VEGF | mir-21 was up-regulated in gliomas | [ |
| miR-124a | Up | FOXA2 | miR-124a acts by silencing FOXA2, resulting in aberrant intracellular lipid accumulation | [ |
| miR-451, miR-21 | Up | c-Myc | – | [ |
| miR-221 | Up | – | miR-221 was up-regulated in gliomas. | [ |
| miR-21, miR-103, miR-24, and miR-125 | Up | – | miR-21, miR-103, miR-24, and miR-125 were up-regulated in gliomas. | [ |
| miR-302-367 | Up | CXCR4/SDF1, SHH, cyclin D, cyclin A and E2F1 | Large amounts of miR-302-367 were found in exosomes, which were internalized by neighboring GBM cells. | [ |
| miR-1290, miR-1246 | Up | – | miR-1290 and miR-1246 were up-regulated in gliomas. | [ |
| miR-1587 | Down | NCOR1 | miR-1587 down-regulates the tumor-suppressive nuclear receptor co-repressor NCOR1 | [ |
| miR-375 | Down | SLC31A1 | miR-375 increases apoptosis while suppressing proliferation, migration and invasion. Inhibits glioma cell progression through SLC31A1 suppression | [ |
| miR-454-3p | Down | ATG12 | miR-454-3p suppresses cell proliferation, migration, invasion, and autophagy in glioma. | [ |
| miR-146b | Down | EGFR and NF-κB | miR-146b decreases EGFR and NF-κB protein in 9 L glioma cells in vitro | [ |
| miR-1246 | Down | TERF2IP | miR-1246 activates the STAT3 signaling pathway and inhibits the NF-κB signaling pathway. | [ |
| miR-124 | Down | CDK6 | miR-124 decreases the migration of GBM cells | [ |
| miR-328-3p, miR-339-5p, miR-340-5p, miR-485-3p,, and miR-543 | Up | – | miR-328-3p, miR-339-5p, miR-340-5p, miR-485-3p,, and miR-543 were up-regulated in gliomas. | [ |
| miR-182-5p, miR-486-5p | Down | – | miR-182-5p and miR-486-5p were down-regulated in gliomas. | [ |
| miR-301a | Up | PTEN | miR-301a up-regulates PTEN. | [ |
| miR-221 | Up | DNM3 | miR-221 up-regulates DNM3. | [ |
| miR-26a | Up | PTEN | miR-26a increases proliferation and angiogenesis. | [ |
Role of exosomal proteins in glioma
| Exosomal protein | Expression status | Target | Note | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| HMGB1 | Up | SASH1 | HMGB1 plays different roles depending on its location: as an extracellular protein, HMGB1 decreases SASH1 expression, but as an exosomal protein, HMGB1 increases SASH1 expression | [ |
| IL-8, PDGFs, caveolin 1, and lysyl oxidase | Up | The exosomal pathway constitutes a potential target that drives hypoxia-dependent intercellular signaling during tumor development. | [ | |
| L1CAM | Up | FGFR, FAK | Increases cell motility, proliferation, and invasiveness. | [ |
| STC1, STC2 | Up | Induces cell migration in a hypoxia-dependent manner | [ | |
| EGFRvIII | Up | CD44, BSG, CD151, CD81 and CD82 | – | [ |
| VEGF-A | Up | claudin-5 and occluding | Increases the permeability of the BBB in vitro by interrupting the expression of claudin-5 and occludin. In vivo permeability assay showed hypoxic GBM-derived exosomes remained functional in the blood circulation and induced permeability in the BBB. | [ |
| CRYAB | Up | – | The U373 glioma cells produce and secrete cryAB in exosomes; stimulation with IL-1β and TNF-α significantly increased the levels of cryAB not only in cells but also in secreted exosomes. | [ |
| PTRF | Up | Cavin1 | PTRF over-expression increases exosome secretion and induces cell growth in vitro. Clinical samples showed a positive correlation between tumor grade and PTRF expression in both tumor tissue and exosomes isolated from blood harvested from glioma patients. | [ |
| PD-1 | Up | – | – | [ |
| down | ELISPOT, IL-13R, | – | [ | |
| IL13Rα2, IL13QD | Up | – | Specific binding of IL13QD to tumor associated exosomes was confirmed. | [ |
| Up | p-ERK1/2 | Exosome uptake appears to be dependent on intact ERK1/2-HSP27 signaling, and ERK1/2 phosphorylation was negatively influenced by CAV1 during internalization of exosomes. | [ | |
| NK-Exo | Up | CD63, Alix | In vivo NK-Exo treatment inhibited tumor xenograft growth compared to control mice, and pretreatment of mice with dextran sulfate 2 h before NK-Exo treatment increased the antitumor effect of NK-Exo compared to control and NK-Exo-alone-treated mice. | [ |
| SRSF1, SRSF3 | Up | PTBP1,PTBP2 | – | [ |
| NANOGP8 | Up | – | – | [ |
| IFN-gamma, granzyme B | Down | – | Granzyme B was significantly inhibited in CD8 + T cells exposed to GL26 cell-derived exosomes, and the exosomes could not inhibit the expression of granzyme B in CD4 + T cells and NK cells. | [ |
| PTENP1 | Up | miR-10a-5p | The lncRNA PTENP1 could be packaged into exosomes from hUC-MSCs, transferred to U87 cells, and then stabilized PTEN by competitively binding miR-10a-5p. | [ |
| CLIC1 | Up | GFP, FLAG-tagged | CLIC1 is a circulating protein, secreted via extracellular vehicles (Evs) released by either cell lines or GBM-derived CSCs. | [ |
| K-Ras | Up | Raf-RBD | – | [ |
| immunoglobulin (Ig) G2 and IgG4 | Up | CD163 | – | [ |
| TrkB | Up | YKL-40 | Inhibits tumor growth in vivo. Plays a key role in the control of GBM progression and aggressiveness. | [ |
| MGMT mRNA | Up | – | – | [ |
| EGFRvIII | Up | CD81 | EGFRvIII expression either in exosomes or tissue was correlated with poor survival. | [ |
| N-glycoproteins | Up | Glycopeptide | 329 N-glycosylation sites corresponding to 180 different N-glycoproteins were enriched and identified in plasma exosomes of glioma patients and healthy subjects. | [ |
| LOX, ADAMTS1, TSP1, VEGF | Up | KCNJ3 | Induces differential gene expression in recipient glioma cells | [ |
| CRCL | Down | T cell | Anti-tumor activity through modulating Cbl-b and c-Cbl signaling. | [ |
| NF-κB | Up | green fluorescent protein | NF-κB inducible promoter mediates widespread reporter gene expression in tumor-associated myeloid-derived cells after systemic injection of exo-AAV in brain tumor-bearing mice | [ |
| Glut-1, HK-2, and PKM-2 | Up | MMP-2, MMP-9 | Increases glucose consumption and generation of lactate and ATP. | [ |
| TDP-43 | Up | – | – | [ |