| Literature DB >> 34956197 |
Pengxiang Yang1,2,3, Yong Peng1, Yuan Feng1, Zhuoying Xu4, Panfeng Feng5, Jie Cao6, Ying Chen7, Xiang Chen2, Xingjian Cao2, Yumin Yang1, Jing Jie2.
Abstract
Immune cell-derived extracellular vesicles (EVs) have increasingly become the focus of research due to their unique characteristics and bioinspired applications. They are lipid bilayer membrane nanosized vesicles harboring a range of immune cell-derived surface receptors and effector molecules from parental cells. Immune cell-derived EVs are important mediators of intercellular communication that regulate specific mechanisms of adaptive and innate immune responses. However, the mechanisms underlying the antitumor effects of EVs are still being explored. Importantly, immune cell-derived EVs have some unique features, including accessibility, storage, ability to pass through blood-brain and blood-tumor barriers, and loading of various effector molecules. Immune cell-derived EVs have been directly applied or engineered as potent antitumor vaccines or for the diagnosis of clinical diseases. More research applications involving genetic engineering, membrane engineering, and cargo delivery strategies have improved the treatment efficacy of EVs. Immune cell-derived EV-based therapies are expected to become a separate technique or to complement immunotherapy, radiotherapy, chemotherapy and other therapeutic modalities. This review aims to provide a comprehensive overview of the characteristics and functions of immune cell-derived EVs derived from adaptive (CD4+ T, CD8+ T and B cells) and innate immune cells (macrophages, NK cells, DCs, and neutrophils) and discuss emerging therapeutic opportunities and prospects in cancer treatment.Entities:
Keywords: NK; T cell; dendritic cells (DCs); extracellular vesicles (EVs); immunotherapy; macrophage; tumor
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34956197 PMCID: PMC8694098 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2021.771551
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
The part of ongoing clinical trials of cancer immunotherapy based on EV.
| ID | Sponsor | Tumor | Enrollment | Strategy | Phase/Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| |||||
| NCT01159288 | Gustave Roussy, Cancer Campus, Grand Paris | NSCLC | 41 | Cyclophosphamide and tumor antigen-loaded Dex | Phase 2/Complete |
| NCT03608631 | M.D. Anderson Cancer Center | Pancreas cancer | 28 | EVs With KrasG12D siRNA | Phase 1/Recruiting |
| NCT01550523 | Jefferson University | Recurrent malignant gliomas | 13 | EVs deliver tumor antigens, activate immune response | Phase 1/Complete |
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| |||||
| NCT03824275 | Columbia University | Prostate cancer | 300 | Diagnostic marker | Phase 2/3/Recruiting |
| NCT03228277 | Konkuk University Medical Center | NSCLC | 25 | Marker after treatment | Phase 2/Complete |
| NCT02977468 | Eileen Connolly | TNBC | 15 | Marker after treatment | Phase 1/Recruiting |
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| NCT01294072 | University of Louisville | Colon cancer | 35 | Plant EVs Deliver Curcumin | Phase 1/Recruiting |
The data source: https://clinicaltrials.gov/. NSCLC, Non small cell lung cancer; TNBC, Three-negative breast cancer.
Major types of extracellular particles.
| Vesicle | Size (nm) | Origin | Markers |
|---|---|---|---|
| Exosomes | 30-150 | Endosomes | Tetraspanins, Alix, TSG101, CD63 |
| Microvesicles | 100-1000 | Plasma membrane | Integrins, selectins, CD40 |
| Apoptotic bodies | 1000-5000 | Plasma membrane, endoplasmic reticulum | Phosphatidylserine, genomic DNA, receptors |
Isolation methods of EVs.
| Isolation Methods | Purity | Principle | Characters |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ultracentrifugation | High | Density | Large acquisition |
| Density-gradient centrifugation | High | Density | Cost time |
| Immune-affinity capture | High | Biomarker | High cost |
| Ultrafiltration | Moderate | Size | Easy and fast |
| Precipitation | Low | Precipitation | Contaminants |
Figure 1Typical characteristics and anti-tumor application of NK-derived EVs. NK EVs binds tumor cells through NKG2D-MICA/B and exhibit cytotoxic effect resulting from a cargo of released cytotoxic proteins, including perforin, granzymes and small antimicrobial peptides, resulting tumor cell apoptosis. Additionally, Engineered NK EVs-coated nanoparticle was employed for chemotherapeutic drug delivery.
Figure 2M1 and M2 macrophage-derived EVs display the opposite anti-tumor effect. Left panel: The presence of MHC and ICAM molecules on the surface of M1 EVs give them the potential to stimulate T cells, resulting T cell activation and tumor apoptosis. The miRNA and LncRNA derived from M1 EVs may aid this process. Right panel: M2 EVs transferred miRNA and LncRNA to regulate invasion-related protein, thus promoting the invasion and metastasis of tumor.
Figure 3DC-derived EVs may stimulate both CD8+ and CD4+ T cells by direct and indirect routes. A route for DC EVs stimulation of T cells occurs directly via the expression of MHC-I, MHC-II and costimulatory molecules on the surface of it. The indirect way stimulation of T cells occurs via bystander DCs through two mechanisms. The first way involves EVs internalization and transfer of antigen-MHC complex. The other way called cross-dressing involves antigen-MHC complex direct transfer to DC surface. Additionally, DC EVs have been shown to possess NKG2D-L and the IL-15/IL-15Rα complex, which can result in NK activation.
Figure 4The antitumor and immunoregulatory effects of T cell-derived EVs. Left panel: CAR-T cell EVs induce antitumor effect by CAR-targeted tumor cells and secreting perforin and granzyme B Middle panel: T EVs exposing the PD-1 receptor can bind PD-L1 expressing tumor cells preventing T cell inactivation. Right panel: T EVs exposing FasL receptor can bind Fas expressing DCs resulting DCs apoptosis and tumor proliferation.