| Literature DB >> 33828985 |
Yang Liu1, Ke Shi1, Yong Chen2, Xianrui Wu1, Zheng Chen1, Ke Cao3, Yongguang Tao4, Xiang Chen5, Junlin Liao6, Jianda Zhou1.
Abstract
Exosomes from extracellular vesicles can activate or inhibit various signaling pathways by transporting proteins, lipids, nucleic acids and other substances to recipient cells. In addition, exosomes are considered to be involved in the development and progression of tumors from different tissue sources in numerous ways, including remodeling of the tumor microenvironment, promoting angiogenesis, metastasis, and invasion, and regulating the immune escape of tumor cells. However, the precise molecular mechanisms by which exosomes participate in these different processes remains unclear. In this review, we describe the research progress of tumor cell-derived exosomes in cancer progression. We also discuss the prospects of the application of exosomes combined with nanoengineered chemotherapeutic drugs in the treatment of cancer.Entities:
Keywords: EMT - epithelial to mesenchymal transformation; angiogenesis; cancer treatment; exosomes; immune regulation; tumor microenvironment
Year: 2021 PMID: 33828985 PMCID: PMC8020998 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2021.639159
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Figure 1The roles of exosomes in cancer. Tumor cell-derived exosomes play a vital role in the remodeling of the tumor microenvironment, and can promote EMT and increase the motility and invasiveness of tumor cells, leading to tumor migration and metastasis. When tumor cells reach new metastasis sites in vivo, tumor cell-derived exosomes can promote the formation of new blood vessels. To enable tumor metastasis, exosomes also can promote tumor metastasis by involving in immune regulation. Finally, exosomes can be used as a carrier for drug delivery in cancer treatment.
Roles of exosomes in cancer progression.
| Source of exosomes | Molecular | Type | Step of tumorigenesis | Action type | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Metastatic breast cancer cells | miR-105 | miRNA | Tumor microenvironmental remodeling | A regulator of migration through targeting the tight junction protein ZO-1 | ( |
| Cancer-associated fibroblast derived exosomes | nutrients | amino acids, lipids, and TCA-cycle intermediates | Tumor microenvironmental remodeling | Inhibit mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation | ( |
| Bladder cancer cells | Casein kinase II α and annexin A2 | Protein | EMT | Promote EMT | ( |
| Lung adenocarcinoma cell | miR-499a-5p | miRNA | EMT | The proliferation, EMT and migration of lung adenocarcinoma cells are promoted through the M-TOR signaling pathway | ( |
| Tumor stem cell | miR-19b-3p | miRNA | EMT | Tumor stem cells cause EMT by expressing the gene PTEN | ( |
| Chronic subdurative hematoma | miR-144-5p | miRNA | Angiogenesis | Promotes highly permeable angiogenesis and inhibits hematoma absorption | ( |
| Gastric cancer cells | miR-155 | miRNA | Angiogenesis | Box-o3 targeting endothelial cells can promote angiogenesis in gastric cancer tissues | ( |
| Bone marrow mesenchymal stem cells | unknown | unknown | Angiogenesis | Promote the survival of flaps and reduce the occurrence of necrosis | ( |
| Nasopharyngeal carcinoma cells | miR-17-5p | miRNA | Angiogenesis | Targeting BAMBI by regulating the AKT/VEGF-A signaling pathway promotes angiogenesis and proliferation and migration of nasopharyngeal carcinoma cells | ( |
| Ovarian cancer cells | miR-205 | miRNA | Angiogenesis | It promotes the metastasis of tumor cells by causing vascularization | ( |
| Pancreatic cancer cell | miR-27a | miRNA | Angiogenesis | The angiogenesis of human microvascular endothelial cells was promoted by BTG2 | ( |
| Breast cancer cell | S100 | Protein | Angiogenesis | Activation of Src kinase signaling pathway promotes pulmonary vascular leakage | ( |
| M2-type macrophages | miR-21-5p&miR-155-5p | miRNA | Invasion and migration | It can combine with BRG1 encoding sequence, down-regulate the expression of BRG1, and promote the invasion and migration of colorectal cancer | ( |
| Colorectal cancer cell | Calcium-dependent activator protein for secretion 1 (CAPS1) | Protein | Migration | Normal epithelial FHC cell migration was promoted | ( |
| HCC827 cells | MET | mRNA | Invasion and migration | Mediates the invasion and migration of non-small cell lung cancer | ( |
| Liver cancer cells | CLEC3B | DNA | Metastasis and angiogenesis | HCC metastasis, EMT, and angiogenesis are mediated through AMPK and VEGF signaling pathways | ( |
| Glioblastoma | L1CAM | Protein | Invasion | Stimulate movement, invasion, and proliferation of glioblastoma | ( |
| Cancer-associated fibroblasts | miR-382-5p | miRNA | Invasion and migration | Promote the invasion and migration of oral squamous cell carcinoma | ( |
| Lymphatic endothelial cells | miR-503-3p、miR-4269&miR-30e-3p | miRNA | Metastasis | Regulate the tumor microenvironment and tumor communication between key molecules and promote the metastasis of breast cancer | ( |
| Breast cancer cells | CD47 | Protein | Immune regulation and tumor metastasis | It may mediate the immune escape of macrophages and T cells, create a tumor metastasis microenvironment for the metastasis, migration and invasion of tumors, and enable tumor cells to escape the recognition, killing and phagocytosis by T cells and NK nuclear macrophages | ( |
| Liver cancer cells | CD81 | Protein | Immune escape and tumor metastasis | Promotes liver cancer cells metastasis in HCC caused by viral hepatitis C | ( |
Exosomes and tumor therapy.
| Exosomes type | Function in tumor therapy | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| The carrier | Exosomes serve as carriers for doxorubicin and paclitaxel, which can be used in targeted cancer therapy. | ( |
| Nano-bioconjugates | Nano engineering technology combined with exosomes for drug delivery, targeting tumor stem cells. aCD47 and CD47 on the surface of tumor cells are specifically recognized, and nano-bio-conjugate can actively target tumor cells. | ( |
| Protein, miRNA, etc. | It is possible to make anti-tumor vaccines, by modifying the products of tumor-derived exosomes. | ( |
| Aspirin-loaded nano-exosomes | Cell uptake was enhanced by clathrin-dependent and independent endocytic method, and the cytotoxicity of aspirin on breast cancer and colorectal cancer cells was significantly improved, while tumor cell apoptosis and autophagy were enhanced. Aspirin-loaded nano-exosomes has an unprecedented ability to remove tumor stem cells. | ( |