| Literature DB >> 33302971 |
Reza Jafari1,2, Reza Rahbarghazi3,4, Mahdi Ahmadi5, Mehdi Hassanpour3,6,7, Jafar Rezaie8.
Abstract
The solid tumor microenvironment possesses a hypoxic condition, which promotes aggressiveness and resistance to therapies. Hypoxic tumor cells undergo broadly metabolic and molecular adaptations and communicate with surrounding cells to provide conditions promising for their homeostasis and metastasis. Extracellular vesicles such as exosomes originating from the endosomal pathway carry different types of biomolecules such as nucleic acids, proteins, and lipids; participate in cell-to-cell communication. The exposure of cancer cells to hypoxic conditions, not only, increases exosomes biogenesis and secretion but also alters exosomes cargo. Under the hypoxic condition, different signaling pathways such as HIFs, Rab-GTPases, NF-κB, and tetraspanin are involved in the exosomes biogenesis. Hypoxic tumor cells release exosomes that induce tumorigenesis through promoting metastasis, angiogenesis, and modulating immune responses. Exosomes from hypoxic tumor cells hold great potential for clinical application and cancer diagnosis. Besides, targeting the biogenesis of these exosomes may be a therapeutic opportunity for reducing tumorigenesis. Exosomes can serve as a drug delivery system transferring therapeutic compounds to cancer cells. Understanding the detailed mechanisms involved in biogenesis and functions of exosomes under hypoxic conditions may help to develop effective therapies against cancer.Entities:
Keywords: Exosomes; HIF; Hypoxia; Tumor microenvironment; Tumorigenesis
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33302971 PMCID: PMC7731629 DOI: 10.1186/s12967-020-02662-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Transl Med ISSN: 1479-5876 Impact factor: 5.531
Fig. 1Biogenesis and secretion of exosomes. Exosomes originate from multivesicular body (MVB) and release into the extracellular matrix upon fusion of MVB with the plasma membrane. One secreted, exosomes can reach to target cells through three possible ways. Microvesicles shed directly from the plasma membrane. N: nucleus
Altered cargo of exosomes under hypoxic condition
| Cancer | Breast | Ovarian | Pancreas | Myeloma | Gliablastoma | Prostate | Colorectal |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cell line | MCF7, SKBR3, and MDA-MB 231/ 4T1 | SKOV3, HO-8910 | BxPC-3 and AsPC-1 | RPMI8226, KMS-11, and U266 | U87MG | LNCaP and PC3 cells LNCaP, 22Rv1, PC3, and PWR-1E | HT29 and HCT116 CRC patients |
| Hypoxic condition | 1% O2 and 0.1% O2 | 1% O2 | 1% O2 | 1% O2 | 1% O2 | 1% O2 | 1% O2 |
| Cargo (Increased) | miR-210 [ | miR-21–3p, miR-125b-5p, and miR-181d-5p [ | miR-21 [ | miR-135b [ | HIF mRNA, LOX, TSP1, VEGF, disintegrin, MMP, and ADAMTS1 [ MMPs, IL-8, PDGFs, caveolin 1, and lysyl oxidase [ | CD63, CD81, HSP90, HSP70, and Annexin II [ Triglycerides, omega-6 fatty acids, linoleic acid, arachidonic acid, palmitic acids, stearic acids, and linoleic acids [ lactic acid [ | Wnt4 [ miR-210 [ |
Roles of exosomes derived from hypoxic tumor cells in cancer
| Cancer | Cell line | Hypoxic condition | Exosome cargo | Mechanism | Function |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Colorectal | HT29 and HCT116 | 1% O2 | Wnt4 | Up-regulates β-catenin nuclear translocation in endothelial cells | Increase angiogenesis [ |
| Glioblastoma multiforme | U87MG | 1% O2 | TF | induces TF/VIIa-mediated PAR-2 activation in endothelial cells | Increase angiogenesis [ |
| Renal | Caki-1, KMRC-1, OSRC-2 and 786-O cells | 1% O2 | CA9 | Increases its target MMP2 | Increase angiogenesis [ |
| Prostate | PCA LNCaP and PC3 cells | 1% O2 | Proteins | ND | Increase invasion and migration [ |
| Nasopharyngeal | CNE1 and CNE2 TW03, C666 and CNE2 and the NP69 | 1% O2 1% O2 | MMP13 HIF-1α miR-24-3p | ND Induces EMT ND | Increase invasion and migration [ Modulate immune response [ |
| Lung and leukemia | IGR-Heu lung carcinoma cell line / K562, NK92, and NKD cell lines | 0.1% O2 | TGF-β1 and miR-23a | TGF-β1 suppresses NKG2D, and miR-23a directly inhibits CD107a | Modulate immune response [ |
| Bladder | 5637 cells | 1% O2 | linc-UCA1 | Induces EMT | Increase invasion and migration [ |
| Hepatocellular | HepG2, Hep3B, PLC-PRF5 and Huh-7 | 21% O2 | linc-RoR | ND | Increase invasion and migration [ |
| Breast cancer | 4T1 | 0.1% O2 | miR-210 | Suppresses the expression of Ephrin A3 and PTP1B | Increase angiogenesis [ |
| ovarian | SKOV3 | 1% O2 | miR-940 | Induces M2-type macrophages exhibiting CD163 and CD206 markers | Modulate immune response [ |
| lung | A549, H1299, and HCC827 | 1% O2 | miR-494 miR-23a | Suppresses PTEN and activates Akt/eNOS pathway in endothelial cells Down-regulating PHD1, PHD2 and ZO-1 | Increase angiogenesis [ Increase angiogenesis [ |
| Leukemia | K562 | 1% O2 | miR-210 | Inhibits the expression of Ephrin A3 | Increase angiogenesis [ |
| Oral squamous cell | SCC-9 and CAL-27 | 1% O2 | miR-21 | Induces EMT | Promote invasion and migration [ |
| Multiple myeloma | RPMI8226, KMS-11, and U266 | 1% O2 | miR-135b | Down-regulates FIH-1 | Increase angiogenesis [ |
Fig. 2Effect of exosomes derived from hypoxic tumor cells on immune cells and angiogenesis