| Literature DB >> 33324409 |
Haipeng Pang1, Shuoming Luo1, Yang Xiao1, Ying Xia1, Xia Li1, Gan Huang1, Zhiguo Xie1, Zhiguang Zhou1.
Abstract
Type 1 diabetes mellitus (T1DM) is a complex autoimmune disorder that mainly affects children and adolescents. The elevated blood glucose level of patients with T1DM results from absolute insulin deficiency and leads to hyperglycemia and the development of life-threatening diabetic complications. Although great efforts have been made to elucidate the pathogenesis of this disease, the precise underlying mechanisms are still obscure. Emerging evidence indicates that small extracellular vesicles, namely, exosomes, take part in intercellular communication and regulate interorgan crosstalk. More importantly, many findings suggest that exosomes and their cargo are associated with the development of T1DM. Therefore, a deeper understanding of exosomes is beneficial for further elucidating the pathogenic process of T1DM. Exosomes are promising biomarkers for evaluating the risk of developingty T1DM, monitoring the disease state and predicting related complications because their number and composition can reflect the status of their parent cells. Additionally, since exosomes are natural carriers of functional proteins, RNA and DNA, they can be used as therapeutic tools to deliver these molecules and drugs. In this review, we briefly introduce the current understanding of exosomes. Next, we focus on the relationship between exosomes and T1DM from three perspectives, i.e., the pathogenic role of exosomes in T1DM, exosomes as novel biomarkers of T1DM and exosomes as therapeutic tools for T1DM.Entities:
Keywords: biomarkers; exosomes; microRNAs; therapy; type 1 diabetes mellitus
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33324409 PMCID: PMC7725901 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2020.593348
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1Exosomes participate in the pathological process of T1DM. Beta cell-derived exosomes that contain islet autoantigens and specific miRNAs can activate the immune system. In return, immune cell-derived exosomes can induce beta-cell dysfunction and apoptosis, eventually leading to T1DM. In addition, exosomes can deliver biological information between beta-cells, and horizontal message transfer can coordinate beta-cell activity. Additionally, some studies have shown that exosomes may serve as mediators between insulin-producing beta cells and stromal cells and are associated with the revascularization process after islet transplantation.
Summary of findings on exosomes and T1DM.
| Experimental subjects | Findings | References |
|---|---|---|
| Rats and humans | Exosomes released from the pancreatic islets contain beta-cell autoantigens and can activate adaptive immune responses | ( |
| MIN6B1 cells | Exosomal miRNA transfer regulates the activity of beta-cells and transduces apoptotic signals | ( |
| NOD mice | Exosomes released from islet-derived MSCs can trigger autoimmune responses in NOD mice | ( |
| INS-1 cells | NCDase-containing exosomes released by INS-1 cells inhibit beta-cell apoptosis induced by high levels of inflammatory cytokines | ( |
| MIN6 and NOD mice | Exosomes containing miR-29b released from beta-cells modulate innate and adaptive immune responses | ( |
| NHI6F Tu28 | Pancreatic beta-cells shed membrane-derived microvesicles | ( |
| MIN6 and NOD mice | Insulinoma-released exosomes can activate autoreactive T cells in NOD mice | ( |
| MIN6 and NOD mice | Insulinoma-released exosomes can activate autoreactive marginal zone-like B cells in prediabetic NOD mice | ( |
| Human islets and NOD mice | Exosomal miRNAs derived from T lymphocytes promote pancreatic beta-cell death | ( |
Summary of findings on exosomes as biomarkers of T1DM.
| Experimental subjects | Findings | References |
|---|---|---|
| Humans | Exosomal miRNAs may serve as potential circulating biomarkers of T1DM | ( |
| Humans | Analysis of plasma-derived exosome miRNAs as novel diagnostic tools for T1DM | ( |
| Humans | Circulating transplant islet-specific exosomes may be a novel diagnostic tool for recurrent autoimmune T1DM after islet transplantation | ( |
| Humans and mice | Transplanted islet-derived exosomal miRNAs as biomarkers for monitoring immune rejection | ( |
| Humans | Urinary excretion of AQP2 and AQP5 | ( |
| Humans | Urinary podocyte EVs may serve as early biomarkers of glomerular injury in T1DM | ( |
| Humans | High levels of exosomal cytokines and angiogenic factors in plasma may serve as biomarkers of diabetic ocular complications | ( |
| Humans | Increased cystatin B and altered protease profiles in urinary EVs may serve as biomarkers of kidney damage in T1DM | ( |
| Rats | Decreased urinary exosomal regucalcin may serve as a biomarker of diabetic kidney disease | ( |
| Humans | Urinary exosomal miR-145 may serve as a biomarker of T1DM with diabetic nephropathy | ( |
| Humans | The WT1 protein in urinary exosomes may be an early noninvasive marker of diabetic nephropathy in T1DM | ( |
Summary of findings on exosomes as a potential therapeutic strategy for T1DM.
| Experimental subjects | Findings | References |
|---|---|---|
| Human MSCs and PBMCs | MSC-derived MVs inhibit inflammatory T cell responses in the islets | ( |
| STZ-induced mouse model of T1DM | Exosomes released by adipose tissue-derived MSCs exert immunomodulatory effects upon T cells and ameliorate clinical symptoms of T1DM | ( |
| Human pancreatic islets | Islet-derived EVs are involved in beta cell-endothelium cross-talk and the neoangiogenesis process and may benefit engraftment of transplanted islets | ( |
| Mouse model of insulin-deficient diabetes | Exosomal miR-106b and miR-222 derived from transplanted bone morrow promote beta-cell proliferation and ameliorate hyperglycemia | ( |
| STZ-induced rat model of T1DM | Stem cell-derived exosomes may regenerate beta-cells through the Pdx-1 pathway | ( |
| STZ-induced rat model of T1DM | Exosomes derived from MSCs exert therapeutic and regenerative effects upon the pancreatic islets | ( |
| Rat model of diabetic nephropathy | Exosomes released by human urine-derived stem cells prevent kidney injury in rats with T1DM | ( |
| STZ-induced rat model of T1DM | Adipose tissue-derived MSC exosomes improve erectile function in diabetic rats | ( |
| Rat model of T1DM | Exosomal miR-145 released by bone morrow stromal cells exerts neurorestorative effects in diabetic rats with stroke | ( |
| STZ-induced diabetic rat model | Exosomes released by human endothelial progenitor cells promote cutaneous wound healing in diabetes | ( |
| NOD | MSC-derived exosomes improve islet transplantation by enhancing islet function and inhibiting immune rejection | ( |
| STZ-induced diabetic mouse model | Exosomes released by bone morrow MSCs improve diabetes-induced cognitive impairment | ( |
| Transgenic mouse model | Hsp20-engineered exosomes may be a potential therapeutic agent for diabetic cardiomyopathy | ( |
| C57BL/6J mouse model | Exosomal miRNA let7c derived from MSCs attenuates renal fibrosis in diabetes | ( |
| Rat model of T1DM | Exosomes derived from human urine-derived stem cells prevent T1DM kidney complications | ( |