| Literature DB >> 33228060 |
Laura C Zanetti-Domingues1, Scott E Bonner2, Marisa L Martin-Fernandez1, Veronica Huber3.
Abstract
EGFR and some of the cognate ligands extensively traffic in extracellular vesicles (EVs) from different biogenesis pathways. EGFR belongs to a family of four homologous tyrosine kinase receptors (TKRs). This family are one of the major drivers of cancer and is involved in several of the most frequent malignancies such as non-small cell lung cancer, breast cancer, colorectal cancer and ovarian cancer. The carrier EVs exert crucial biological effects on recipient cells, impacting immunity, pre-metastatic niche preparation, angiogenesis, cancer cell stemness and horizontal oncogene transfer. While EV-mediated EGFR signalling is important to EGFR-driven cancers, little is known about the precise mechanisms by which TKRs incorporated in EVs play their biological role, their stoichiometry and associations to other proteins relevant to cancer pathology and EV biogenesis, and their means of incorporation in the target cell. In addition, it remains unclear whether different subtypes of EVs incorporate different complexes of TKRs with specific functions. A raft of high spatial and temporal resolution methods is emerging that could solve these and other questions regarding the activity of EGFR and its ligands in EVs. More importantly, methods are emerging to block or mitigate EV activity to suppress cancer progression and drug resistance. By highlighting key findings and areas that remain obscure at the intersection of EGFR signalling and EV action, we hope to cross-fertilise the two fields and speed up the application of novel techniques and paradigms to both.Entities:
Keywords: EV heterogeneity; Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor (EGFR); ExTRAcrine signalling; cancer; epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT); extracellular vesicles (EVs); immune suppression; microenvironment subversion; therapy resistance; tumour microenvironment
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Year: 2020 PMID: 33228060 PMCID: PMC7699420 DOI: 10.3390/cells9112505
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cells ISSN: 2073-4409 Impact factor: 6.600
Figure 1A diagram of the possible routes of formation of extracellular vesicles (EVs), via the endosomal pathway (exosomes), directly from membrane shedding (microvesicles) and via large-scale, non-apoptotic blebbing (large oncosomes). EE, early endosome; ER, endoplasmic reticulum; RE, recycling endosome.
Figure 2The EGFR family: (A) Cartoons of EGFR family homodimers showing the extracellular domain in its back-to-back dimer conformation, bound to ligand where applicable, and the intracellular asymmetric tyrosine kinase dimer, joined by the Transmembrane Domain (TMD). The latter leads to phosphorylation of tyrosines on the C-terminal tail (yellow dots) and recruitment of effectors (red, teal, orange and lime green shapes). The red “no entry” symbols indicate the lack of a known soluble ligand for HER2 and the pseudokinase status of HER3. Also shown is a cartoon of a full-length, transmembrane EGFR family (pro)ligand. (B) Molecular model view (above) and cartoon view (below) of the conformational changes involved in ligand-induced dimerisation in the EGFR receptor, adapted from Martin-Fernandez M. et al., (2019).
Figure 3An EGFR-centric view of the involvement of EVs in the Hallmarks of Cancer [97], summarising the key findings for the role of EGFR+/Ligand+ EVs in the “achievement” of each. The central cartoon schematically depicts a sEV displaying EGFR, a full-length transmembrane EGFR family ligand, a tetraspanin marker and nucleotidic cargo. Findings are denoted by first author and year and colour-coded according to the role played by EGFR and/or its ligands in the biological outcome referenced.
Summary of the effects of EGFR and its ligands when packaged in EVs.
| Parental Cancer Type | EV Cargo | Effect | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| CML | AREG | Activates bone marrow stromal cells to secrete CML survival factors. | [ |
| Multiple Myeloma | AREG | Induces differentiation of pre-osteoclasts | [ |
| NSCLC | AREG | Induces differentiation of pre-osteoclasts | [ |
| SACC | EREG | Induces EMT in parental SACC cells | [ |
| Breast Cancer | HB-EGF | Induces survival and migration of parental cells in response to hypoxia | [ |
| GBM | EGFR vIII | Induces secretion of proangiogenic factors by endothelial cells | [ |
| Various EGFR+ cancer cell lines | pEGFR | Induces secretion of proangiogenic factors by endothelial cells | [ |
| EBV+ Nasopharyngeal Carcinoma | EGFR | Induces secretion of proangiogenic factors by endothelial cells in response to LMP1 expression | [ |
| NSCLC | EGFR/Sortilin/TrKB | Induces secretion of proangiogenic factors by endothelial cells | [ |
| OSCC | EGFR | Induces EMT in bystander epithelial cells | |
| NSCLC | EGFR or EGFR del19 | Induces differentiation of tolerogenic DCs | [ |
| Various cell lines | EGFR | Induces survival and differentiation of TAMs | |
| HCC | EGFR | Represses miR-26a and miR-26b and induces HGF expression | [ |
| A431 | EGFR | Induction of EGFR signalling in fibroblasts in response to Dsg-2 expression | [ |