| Literature DB >> 34281588 |
Lei Yin1, Xiaotian Liu2, Xuejun Shao3, Tao Feng3, Jun Xu3, Qi Wang3, Shenghao Hua3.
Abstract
Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer-associated deaths accounting for 24% of all cancer deaths. As a crucial phase of tumor progression, lung cancer metastasis is linked to over 70% of these mortalities. In recent years, exosomes have received increasing research attention in their role in the induction of carcinogenesis and metastasis in the lung. In this review, recent studies on the contribution of exosomes to lung cancer metastasis are discussed, particularly highlighting the role of lung tumor-derived exosomes in immune system evasion, epithelial-mesenchymal transition, and angiogenesis, and their involvement at both the pre-metastatic and metastatic phases. The clinical application of exosomes as therapeutic drug carriers, their role in antitumor drug resistance, and their utility as predictive biomarkers in diagnosis and prognosis are also presented. The metastatic activity, a complex multistep process of cancer cell invasion, survival in blood vessels, attachment and subsequent colonization of the host's organs, is integrated with exosomal effects. Exosomes act as functional mediating factors in cell-cell communication, influencing various steps of the metastatic cascade. To this end, lung cancer cell-derived exosomes enhance cell proliferation, angiogenesis, and metastasis, regulate drug resistance, and antitumor immune activities during lung carcinogenesis, and are currently being explored as an important component in liquid biopsy assessment for diagnosing lung cancer. These nano-sized extracellular vesicles are also being explored as delivery vehicles for therapeutic molecules owing to their unique properties of biocompatibility, circulatory stability, decreased toxicity, and tumor specificity. The current knowledge of the role of exosomes highlights an array of exosome-dependent pathways and cargoes that are ripe for exploiting therapeutic targets to treat lung cancer metastasis, and for predictive value assessment in diagnosis, prognosis, and anti-tumor drug resistance.Entities:
Keywords: Biomarker; Clinical application; Diagnosis; Drug resistance; Exosome; Lung cancer; Metastasis; Therapy
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34281588 PMCID: PMC8287779 DOI: 10.1186/s12967-021-02985-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Transl Med ISSN: 1479-5876 Impact factor: 5.531
Fig. 1The role of exosomes in immune evasion and EMT promotion in lung cancer. In the lung cancer tumor microenvironment, there is increased expression of exosomes which inhibit tumor-cytotoxic cells such as NK and T cells, while enhancing the recruitment, activation, and expansion of immunosuppressive cells such as MDSCs and Tregs. Exosomal cargoes including EFGR, PD-L1, TGF-β, miR-23a, Wnt, and their associated signaling, facilitate immune evasion and induce EMT, resulting in tumor metastasis
Fig. 2Exosomal-induced angiogenesis in lung tumor. Lung tumor-derived exosomes induce fibroblasts to secrete exosomes that express factors such as MMP9, VEGF-A, FGF2, and miR-210 via the JAK2/STAT3 signaling pathway. These exosomes together with tumor-produced vesicles enhance the activation of tumor-promoting cells such as macrophages and neutrophils. Other exosomal cargoes directly trigger angiogenesis by increasing blood vessel proliferation, sprouting, and density, resulting in promoted metastasis
Fig. 3Lung tumor microenvironmental factors associated with exosomal metastatic promoting effects. Several factors, classified as growth/cytokine factors, exosomal cargoes, genes, pathways/axes, and receptors are directly or indirectly influenced by exosomes to participate in the promotion of lung tumor metastasis. Distant organs commonly prone to lung tumor metastasis include the liver, bone, kidney, brain, and other the contralateral unaffected lung
Participation of exosomes in lung cancer metastasis
| Source of exosome | Exosomal component | Mechanism or pathway | Principal effects | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| BMSCs | miR-210-3p, miR-193a-3p, and miR-5100 | Exosome-mediated transfer of miRNAs activates STAT3 pathway | Enhanced cancer cell invasion and EMT | [ |
| Melanoma | RAB1A, RAB5B, RAB7, and RAB27A | Reprogrammed cells were positive for c-Kit, receptor tyrosine kinase Tie2, and Met | Increased metastatic behavior, induced vascular leakiness at pre-metastatic sites, and reprogrammed bone marrow progenitor cells | [ |
| Tumor | snRNAs | Activation of lung epithelial TLR3 to recruit neutrophils | TLR3-deficient mice showed reduced lung metastasis | [ |
| Phosphorylation of NF-κB p65 subunit and MAPKs ERK, JNK, and p38 signaling pathway | Exosomal snRNAs activated TLR3 to induce chemokine secretion and neutrophil recruitment | |||
| hucMSCs | – | Activation of Smad2/3, AKT/GSK-3β/β-catenin, NF-κB, ERK, JNK, and p38 MAPK in TGF-β1 signaling pathways | Promoted EMT, invasion, and migration, yet inhibited proliferation and promoted apoptosis of lung cancer cells | [ |
| Lung tumor | circSATB2 | Positive regulation of FSCN1 expression via miR-326 in lung cancer cells | Enhanced proliferation, migration, and invasion of NSCLC cells, as well as an induced abnormal proliferation of normal human bronchial epithelial cells | [ |
| Lung tumor | miR-660-5p | miR-660-5p targeting of KLF9 to promote tumorigenesis | Enhanced proliferation, migration, viability, and metastasis | [ |
| Lung tumor | circ-CPA4 and let-7 miRNA | CPA4-regulated effects via let-7 miRNA/PD-L1 axis | Promoted cell stemness, mobility, and drug resistance of NSCLC | [ |
| Lung tumor | lnc-MMP2-2 | TGF-β-mediated exosomal miRNA regulation | Increased cancer cell migration, invasion potential, and vascular permeability | [ |
| Mouse and human lung tumor | integrins α6β4 and α6β1 | Activation of Src phosphorylation and pro-inflammatory S100 gene expression | Associated with lung metastasis and predict organ-specific metastasis | [ |
| SCLC patients and mouse model | miR-141 | Activation of miR-141/KLF12 pathway | SCLC angiogenesis | [ |
| Administration of lung cancer-derived exosomes to NIH/3T3 cells | miR-210 | Modulation of JAK2/STAT3 signaling pathway and TET2 in recipient fibroblasts | Increased angiogenesis via elevated expression of proangiogenic factors MMP9, FGF2 and VEGFA | [ |
| NSCLC cells | miR-619-5p | Targeted inhibition of RCAN1.4 | Promoted growth and metastasis of NSCLCs | [ |
| Adipocytes | MMP3 and MMP9 | Transfer of MMP3 to activate MMP9 | Promoted lung tumor metastasis | [ |
| Plasma | Three clusters of miRNAs including miR-574-5p, 328-3p and miR-423-3p | Regulation of the Wnt/β-catenin pathway | Involved in preconditioning the metastatic niche and promoting bone metastasis of lung cancer | [ |
Predictive utility of exosomes in lung cancer
| Experimental model/source | Exosomal component | Predictive effect | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mouse syngeneic tumor model | miR-210-3p, miR-193a-3p, and miR-5100 | miR-193a-3p alone can differentiate cancer patients from non-cancerous controls, but the combination of the three gives better diagnostic accuracy | [ |
| Primary SCLC tissues and NSCLC tissues | FLI1 exonic circular RNAs | Serum exosomal FECR1 is associated with poor survival and clinical response to chemotherapy | [ |
| Human NSCLC tissue | miR‐18a, miR‐20a, miR‐92a, miR‐210, and miR‐126 | Prognostic biomarkers in patients with NSCLC—poor prognosis | [ |
| NSCLC patients | eIF4E | Independent prognostic factor for shorter overall survival and progression-free survival | [ |
| Lung cancer patients’ serum | miR-574-5p, 328-3p and miR-423-3p | Deferential in lung cancer patients with bone metastasis | [ |
| NSCLC patients | miR-330-3p | Biomarker for identifying NSCLC with metastatic potential, especially brain metastasis | [ |
| Serum of NSCLC patients and lung squamous cell carcinoma of patients | miR-15a-5p, miR-320a, miR-25-3p, miR-192-5p, let-7d-5p, let-7e-5p, miR-148a-3p, miR-92a-3p, miR-375 and miR-10b-5p | Deferential in lung cancer patients and correlates with cancer stage | [ |
| NSCLC cells | miR-34c-3p | Diagnostic and prognostic marker for NSCLC with low levels indicating tumor invasion and migration | [ |
| Serum of lung cancer patients | miR-106b | Promising diagnostic biomarker and drug target for patients with lung cancer | [ |
| Serum of lung cancer patients | CD317 and EGFR | Diagnostic biomarker of NSCLC | [ |
| Urine and lung tissue of NSCLC patients | LRG1 | Diagnostic biomarker of NSCLC | [ |
| Plasma of lung cancer patients | CD151, CD171, and tetraspanin 8 | Diagnostic biomarker of lung cancer | [ |