| Literature DB >> 34943819 |
Zaira Boussadia1, Adriana Rosa Gambardella2,3, Fabrizio Mattei2, Isabella Parolini2.
Abstract
The mechanisms of melanoma progression have been extensively studied in the last decade, and despite the diagnostic and therapeutic advancements pursued, malignant melanoma still accounts for 60% of skin cancer deaths. Therefore, research efforts are required to better define the intercellular molecular steps underlying the melanoma development. In an attempt to represent the complexity of the tumour microenvironment (TME), here we analysed the studies on melanoma in acidic and hypoxic microenvironments and the interactions with stromal and immune cells. Within TME, acidity and hypoxia force melanoma cells to adapt and to evolve into a malignant phenotype, through the cooperation of the tumour-surrounding stromal cells and the escape from the immune surveillance. The role of tumour exosomes in the intercellular crosstalk has been generally addressed, but less studied in acidic and hypoxic conditions. Thus, this review aims to summarize the role of acidic and hypoxic microenvironment in melanoma biology, as well as the role played by melanoma-derived exosomes (Mexo) under these conditions. We also present a perspective on the characteristics of acidic and hypoxic exosomes to disclose molecules, to be further considered as promising biomarkers for an early detection of the disease. An update on the use of exosomes in melanoma diagnosis, prognosis and response to treatment will be also provided and discussed.Entities:
Keywords: acidic and hypoxic microenvironment; biomarkers; cancer associated fibroblasts; melanoma; tumour exosomes
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34943819 PMCID: PMC8699343 DOI: 10.3390/cells10123311
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cells ISSN: 2073-4409 Impact factor: 6.600
Molecules upregulated in acidic and hypoxic Mexo. List of molecules upregulated in exosomes secreted in hypoxic (blue) and acidic (orange) TME. Targets and functional effects on tumour progression are described in several tumour types as reported in References. N.D., not detected targets, * Refer to Supplementary Data S1 for the specific reference list.
| Molecule | Targets | Functional Effects | Bibliography * |
|---|---|---|---|
| miR-494 | BIM; PTEN | Modulates cell proliferation; promotes cell migration and invasion; enhances angiogenesis and tumour growth under hypoxic conditions. | [ |
| miR-1290 | SOCS4; LHX6; CCNG2; IKK1; NKD1; INPP4B | Promotes cell proliferation, tumour growth, metastatization and EMT; supresses apoptosis and increases resistance to chemo-radiation | [ |
| AKR7A2 | Succinic semialdehyde | Supports gamma-Hydroxybutyrate production | [ |
| DDX39B | Pre-ribosomal RNA; BRCA1 mRNA | Enhances cell proliferation and increases cell chemotherapy resistance | [ |
| EIF3C | PI3K/Akt/NF-κB; THBS1, RAP1A, CYR61, ADAMTS1, TUFT1, CFL2, EPHA and EPHB; WNT5B, DHH, SMO, RAC2, PCSK1N and INMBA | Promotes cell proliferation, survival, migration and invasiveness | [ |
| N.D. | Impairs the sensitivity to EGFR-TKI (Erlotinib) by enhancing the autophagic activity | [ | |
| FARSA | Activated by FARSA-AS1 | Promotes tumour growth and metastasis | [ |
| circFARSA | miR-330-5p/LASP1 | Enhance proliferation, migration, and invasion | [ |
| PMRT5 | H3R8, H4R3 and RBL2; CUL4AB promoters; PDCD4; eIF4E; E2F1; HIF-1 | Promotes cancer cell proliferation and inhibits apoptosis | [ |
| MDM4 | Supports drug resistance to palbociclib | [ | |
| IFI16 and NLRC5 | Impairs antitumor immune response | [ | |
| BCL6 | Regulates the germinal centre reaction | [ | |
| VARS | TCTP-EF1A2 | Promotes tumorigenesis and tumour progression | [ |
| hnRNP L | miR-574-3p; AXL; SRSF3; p53, Bcl-2, caspases-3, -6, -9 and MAPK; SPRY4-IT1 | Promotes cell proliferation and inhibits apoptosis, enhances tumorigenesis and the tumour metastatic potential | [ |
| hnRNP K | MAP 1B-LC1; SRSF1; DUSP1; EZH2-SOX2; CCND1, G0S2, XAF1 and ERCC4; MMP12 and ß-catenin; XIAP; GSN mRNA; MMP-2 | Promotes EMT, cell proliferation, migration and invasion; role in chemoresistance | [ |
| PTGS2, CCK3, RAS, ERK and MMP-3. | Promotes tumour metastasis regulating extracellular matrix, cell motility, and angiogenesis pathways | [ | |
| RAN | Importin-β; RhoA; Caspase-3; AR; Met and c-Met receptor; PI3 kinase; Txl-2b; AR and CXCR4; Cyclin A, Cyclin D1, Cyclin E, CDK2, CDK4, phospho-Rb and Survivin; PI3K/Akt/mTORC1 and Ras/MEK/ERK; FGF2; Aurora Kinase A; miR-21 | Enhances tumorigenesis; inhibits apoptosis; promotes cell proliferation, migration and invasion; promotes gefitinib resistance | [ |
| NRAS | BRAF, PI3K, PLC/PKC, RAL | Promote proliferation, survival and cell growth, and enhances cell migration | [ |
| SDF-1, I-TAC, CCL9/10, and MCP5 | Induces the tumour immune escape | [ | |
| HSPA1L | IGF1Rβ and β-Catenin | Enhances EMT and Cancer Stem Cell-like properties | [ |
| HIF-1α/GP78 | Promotes the cellular prion protein (PrPC) accumulation and tumorigenicity | [ | |
| HSPA5 (GRP78) | VEGFR-2; Kringle 5 | Promotes vascularization | [ |
| TFEB, CSTD, CTSL, and LAMP1 | Supports cell protection against ER stress and ROS damage; regulates lysosomal activity | [ | |
| ATF4-DDIT4-mTORC1 | Induces pro-survival autophagy | [ | |
| Cripto; Proteinase inhibitor α2-macroglobulin (α2M *); FAK; PRMT7; PI3K/Akt/Mdm2 | Activates EMT and promotes cell proliferation, migration and invasion | [ | |
| Raf-1; Caspase-7; PERK; Wnt | Inhibits apoptosis and enhances cell survival | [ | |
| CD5L; CHOP, Bcl-2 and Bax; GPX4; ERK/AKT and BOK/NOXA | Involved in chemoresistance | [ | |
| IL-10, TGF-β and IDO; PD-L1; LAP/TGF-beta | Supports tumour immune escape; cell protection from CTL-mediated lysis | [ | |
| HSP90B1 (GRP94 | Twist1 | Promotes vasculogenic mimicry | [ |
| CCT8/c-Jun; AKT and eNOS; TGF-β1; Ack1; RAC1, VAMP2, LAMP1, SYNE2, integrin α2/αL; Wnt/β-catenin | Contributes to tumorigenesis and promotes cell migration, invasion and metastasis | [ | |
| Mdm2 E3 ligase | Inhibits apoptosis and decreases p53 levels | [ | |
| Proteasome and MHC molecules | Participates in peptide generation and modulates immune system | [ | |
| TGF-β and SMAD2 | Induces Treg infiltration by promoting the TGF-β signalling pathway. | [ | |
| TNF-α, IL-10, IL-12 p70 and IFN-γ | Promotes T cell response, enhances DC antigen presentation and induces cytokine secretion | [ | |
| HSP90AB1 | VEGFR | Promotes endothelial tumor angiogenesis and accelerates neovascularization | [ |
| Bcl-2 | Inhibits cell apoptosis and increases the caspase activation | [ | |
| Fibronectin | Induces fibronectin exocytosis and formation of extracellular matrix | [ | |
| ERBB2 and CDK4; LRP5 | Promotes cell proliferation, invasion and migration, tolerance to chemotherapeutic drugs and in vivo metastasis | [ | |
| CFL2 | miR-3189-3p; miR-369-3p; | Enhances cell proliferation and migration; impairs tumour cell apoptosis | [ |
| GSN | Nm23-H1; MCL-1, MMP-2 and MMP-9; p-AKT and p-P38 | Promotes cell growth, migration and invasion and in vivo tumour growth | [ |
| XIAP, FLIP, Akt and AIF; PSME2, PTK2B, FOS, JUN, ITGB1, MAP2K7, MAP3K4, MAP3K12, Rac1 and RRM2B | Inhibits apoptosis; supports the response to cisplatin | [ | |
| TIMP3 | Tnfr1 | Supports early stage of tumorigenesis | [ |
| GANAB | Wnt/β-catenin | Promotes proliferation and suppresses apoptosis | [ |
| HYOU1 | LDHB mRNA; IFN-type I; CHOP; VEGF; PI3K/AKT; MMP-2 | Promotes proliferation, migration, invasion of cancer cells and inhibits apoptosis | [ |
| Sphingo-mielin | KRAS | Increases the growth of oncogenic K-Ras-transformed tumours | [ |
| EGFR/ErbB1 | Modulates cell motility and focal adhesion clustering | [ |
Figure 1Bipartite network between hypoxic miRNAs and acidic-driven Mexo proteins. These miRNAs are related to hypoxia, and were generally described within Exo, but not within hypoxic Exo. The network (grey lines) displays hypoxia-associated miRNAs (hsa-mir, cyan squares; n = 57) targeting the indicated melanoma metastatic genes (green circles) whose expression was found enriched in acidic Mexo (summarized in Table 1). The red arrowheads depict miRNAs experimentally involved in melanoma progression, metastatic expansion and drug therapy resistance (summarized in Table 2). This bipartite network has been generated by interrogating the publicly available database miRNet (https://www.mirnet.ca, accessed on 30 March 2021; see Data Availability Statement for further details) within the exosome dataset (n = 1250 hsa-mir) and the indicated genes.
Effects of hypoxic miRNAs listed in Figure 1 (red arrowheads) on melanoma progression, metastasis, and therapy resistance. Mt, Metastatic expansion; Pr, Proliferation; Is, Immunosuppression; Dr, Drug resistance; EMT, Epithelial to Mesenchimal Transition; * Refer to Supplementary Materials for the specific reference list.
| miRNA Name | Involved Process | Oncomir | Effects | References * |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| hsa-let-7f-5p | Mt | No | Interferes with cell anchorage and promotes cell | [ |
| hsa-mir-10b-5p | Mt | Yes | Promotes progression and metastasis through by donwregulation of ITCH in Wnt/beta-Catenin | [ |
| hsa-mir-125a-3p | Mt, Dr | No | Promotes melanoma progression and metastasis via Lin28B protein; | [ |
| hsa-mir-150-5p | Mt | No | Key regulator of proliferation, invasion and | [ |
| hsa-mir-152-3p | Mt | No | Promotes malignant melanoma progression by | [ |
| hsa-mir-155-5p | Pr | No | Can increase melanoma progression by modulation of the SKI factor | [ |
| hsa-mir-181b-3p | Pr | No | Elicit melanoma cell cycle by targeting the CTDSPL protein | [ |
| hsa-mir-188-3p | Mt | No | Sustains melanoma progression via Mesenchimal Stem Cell reprogramming | [ |
| hsa-mir-191-3p | Pr | No | Associated with poor survival in melanoma patients | [ |
| hsa-mir-196a-5p | Pr | No | Aberrantly expressed in melanoma by disregulation of HOX-C8 expression | [ |
| hsa-mir-199a-3p | Mt | Yes | Promotion of melanoma metastasis and angiogenesis by targeting the ApoE lipoprotein | [ |
| hsa-mir-200a-3p | Mt, Dr | No | Reduced response to CDK4/6 inhibitor in highly | [ |
| hsa-mir-200b-3p | Pr | No | Activates melanoma invasiveness, progression and EMT via the NEAT1/SMAD2 axis | [ |
| hsa-mir-203a-3p | Mt | Yes | Promotion of stemness, increased BRAF expression and augmented tumorigenesis in melanoma cell lines and in vivo | [ |
| hsa-mir-210-3p | Is | No | Promotes melanoma progression by | [ |
| hsa-mir-21-3p | Mt | Yes | Promotes melanoma cell invasiveness by decreasing the expression of the tissue Metalloproteinase 3 | [ |
| hsa-mir-21-5p | Pr | Yes | Targets CDKN2C and activates melanoma cell | [ |
| hsa-mir-224-5p | Mt | Yes | Induction of EMT by TXNIP downregulation | [ |
| hsa-mir-24-3p | Mt, Dr | No | Confers resistance to Vemurafenib through the | [ |
| hsa-mir-26b-5p | Is | No | Elicits melanoma progression by favoring the HLA class I-mediated immune escape | [ |
| hsa-mir-30a-5p | Dr | No | Confers resistance to Cisplatin by targeting the IGF1R gene | [ |
| hsa-mir-30d-3p | Mt, Is | Yes | Enhances melanoma cell invasiveness and | [ |
| hsa-mir-373-3p | Mt, Is | Yes | Decreases immunovisibility to melanoma thus | [ |
| hsa-mir-93 | Mt | No | Found upmodulated in melanoma metastases | [ |
Figure 2Model of Exosome-based bi-directional crosstalk between CAFs, immune cells and Melanoma. During the development of the primary tumour, CAFs located in the TME release CAFexo which can increase the aggressiveness of MCs. In parallel, MCs in the acidic and hypoxic region (yellow box) can also release acidic and hypoxic Mexo, thus coordinating the generation of mMCs in the acidic and hypoxic regions of melanoma microenvironment, in part via EMT. These mMCs will produce mMexo which, through EMT, do elicit the activation of SCs and NFs into CAFs. In addition, mMCs will migrate into blood vessels and, by releasing mMexo, will contribute to the generation of PMN in distant organs (i.e., lung and LNs), which in turn become educated to receive the migrating mMCs (brown box). In the blood vessel environment (red box) mMCs and CAFs induce ECs and NFs to be activated into CAFs, in part by an EMT-dependent manner. CAFs will release CAFexo which participate in the PMN formation in distant organs, in coordination with mMexo. The acidic Mexo released by MCs will also reach the infiltrating immune cells (light blue box), leading to the activation of MDSCs, M2M and Tregs, and suppression of DCs and NKs. The final effect of such CAF-immune cells-melanoma crosstalk results in the generation of PMNs in distant organs, and the suppression of the anti-tumoural immune responses. CAFexo, CAF-derived exosomes; Mexo, melanoma-derived exosomes; mMexo, metastatic melanoma-derived exosomes; LNs, lymph nodes; NF, normal fibroblast; MC, melanoma cell; mMC, metastatic melanoma cell; EMT, Epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition; SC, skin cell; PC, pericyte; EC, endothelial cells; DC, dendritic cell; M2M, M2-differentiated macrophage; NK, natural killer cell, Treg, T regulatory lymphocyte; CD8, CD8+ T lymphocyte; MDSC, myeloid-derived suppressor cell; PMN, pre-metastatic niche.