| Literature DB >> 33968676 |
Fumihiko Urabe1,2, Takahiro Kimura1, Kagenori Ito1,2, Yusuke Yamamoto2, Shunsuke Tsuzuki1, Jun Miki1,3, Takahiro Ochiya4, Shin Egawa1.
Abstract
Clinically, the detection of bladder cancer (BCa) typically requires cystoscopy, which is potentially harmful and sometimes accompanied by adverse effects. Thus, new biomarkers are desirable for improving the management of BCa. Recently, "liquid biopsy" has received enormous attentions and has been extensively studied due to its promising clinical implication for precise medicine. Especially, extracellular vesicles (EVs) have attracted strong interest as a potential source of biomarkers. EVs have been reported to be found in almost all types of body fluids and are easy to collect. In addition, EVs tightly reflect the current state of the disease by inheriting specific biomolecules from their parental cells. Urinary EVs have gained great scientific interest in the field of BCa biomarker research since urine is in direct contact with BCa and can contain large amounts of EVs from the tumour microenvironment. To date, various kinds of biomolecules, including noncoding RNAs, mRNAs, and proteins, have been investigated as biomarkers in urinary EVs. In this narrative review, we summarize the recent advances regarding urinary EVs as non-invasive biomarkers in patients with BCa. The current hurdles in the clinical implications of EV-based liquid biopsy and the potential applications of EV research are also discussed. 2021 Translational Andrology and Urology. All rights reserved.Entities:
Keywords: Extracellular vesicles (EVs); biomarker; bladder cancer (BCa); exosome
Year: 2021 PMID: 33968676 PMCID: PMC8100833 DOI: 10.21037/tau-20-1039
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Transl Androl Urol ISSN: 2223-4683
Potential use of urinary extracellular vesicles in bladder cancer
| Biomolecules | Role | Marker | Isolation methods | Type assay | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| miRNAs | Diagnostic | miR-205, -2003c-3p, 29b-3p | Urine Exosome RNA Isolation Kit | nanostring microRNA assay, droplet digital PCR | ( |
| Diagnostic (high grade bladder cancer) | miR-375 | Ultracentrifugation | microarray, qRT-PCR | ( | |
| Diagnostic (low grade bladder cancer) | miR-146a | Ultracentrifugation | microarray, qRT-PCR | ( | |
| Diagnostic | miR-21-5p | Ultracentrifugation | microarray, qRT-PCR | ( | |
| Diagnostic | Combination of miRNAs | No isolation method | microarray | ( | |
| lncRNA | Diagnostic (invasive bladder cancer) | HOTAIR, HOX-AS-2, ANRIL, linc-RoR | Ultracentrifugation | RNA sequence, RT-PCR | ( |
| Diagnostic (invasive bladder cancer) | HYMA1, LINC0047, LOC100506688, OTX2-AS1 | Ultracentrifugation | RNA sequence, RT-PCR | ( | |
| Diagnostic and prognostic | MALAT1, PCAT-1, SPRY4-IT1 | Urine Exosome RNA Isolation Kit | qRT-PCR | ( | |
| circRNA | Diagnostic and prognostic | circPRMT5 | Ultracentrifugation | circRNA array, qRT-PCR | ( |
| mRNA | Diagnostic | SLC2A1, GPRC5, KRT17 | Exosome isolation tube | RNA sequence, qRT-PCR | ( |
| Diagnostic | LASS2, GALT1 | Ultracentrifugation | microarray, RT-PCR | ( | |
| Protein | Diagnostic and prognostic | alpha 1-antitrypsin H2B1K | Ultracentrifugation | mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) | ( |
| Diagnostic | HEXB, S100A4, SND1, TALDO1 | Ultracentrifugation | western blotting | ( | |
| Diagnostic | TACSTD2 | Ultracentrifugation | mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS, LC-MRM/MS), ELISA | ( | |
| Diagnostic (invasive bladder cancer) | EDIL-3 | Sucrose/D2O cushion ultracentrifugation | mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS), western blotting | ( | |
| Diagnostic (invasive bladder cancer) | Periostin | Ultracentrifugation | mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS), western blotting | ( |
Figure 1Clinical application of extracellular vesicles (EVs) in bladder cancer management. Urinary EVs are likely to be clinically useful biomarkers for bladder cancer. EV-associated biomolecules can be examined using several modalities, including real-time PCR, western blotting, and ExoScreen assays and microfluidic devices. Three therapeutic applications have been proposed: 1. inhibition of EV secretion, 2. elimination of circulating EVs, and 3. disruption of EV absorption. These EV-targeted strategies may add additional value to existing therapeutic methods.