| Literature DB >> 34973131 |
Jiao He1, Weihong Ren2, Wei Wang3, Wenyan Han3, Lu Jiang3, Dai Zhang3, Mengqi Guo1.
Abstract
Exosomes are extracellular vesicles secreted by a variety of living cells, which have a certain degree of natural targeting as nano-carriers. Almost all exosomes released by cells will eventually enter the blood circulation or be absorbed by other cells. Under the action of content sorting mechanism, some specific surface molecules can be expressed on the surface of exosomes, such as tetraspanins protein and integrin. To some extent, these specific surface molecules can fuse with specific cells, so that exosomes show specific cell natural targeting. In recent years, exosomes have become a drug delivery system with low immunogenicity, high biocompatibility and high efficacy. Nucleic acids, polypeptides, lipids, or small molecule drugs with therapeutic function are organically loaded into exosomes, and then transported to specific types of cells or tissues in vivo, especially tumor tissues, to achieve targeting drug delivery. The natural targeting of exosome has been found and recognized in some studies, but there are still many challenges in effective clinical treatments. The use of the natural targeting of exosomes alone is incapable of accurately transporting the goods loaded to specific sites. Besides, the natural targeting of exosomes is still an open question in disease targeting and efficient gene/chemotherapy combined therapy. Engineering transformation and modification on exosomes can optimize its natural targeting and deliver the goods to a specific location, providing wide use in clinical treatment. This review summarizes the research progress of exosomal natural targeting and transformation strategy of obtained targeting after transformation. The mechanism of natural targeting and obtained targeting after transformation are also reviewed. The potential value of exosomal targeting in clinical application is also discussed.Entities:
Keywords: Engineering; Exosomes; Targeting; Transformation
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 34973131 PMCID: PMC9458566 DOI: 10.1007/s13346-021-01087-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Drug Deliv Transl Res ISSN: 2190-393X Impact factor: 5.671
Fig. 1Exosomal biogenesis
Comparison of advantages and disadvantages of exosomal extraction methods
| Separation methods | Principle | Advantages | Disadvantages |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ultracentrifugation [ | Separation based on molecular density, size and shape | Low cost, suitable for a large number of samples and low pollution risk [ | Time consuming, low yield, high cost, easy to damage integrity, and biological activity |
| Ultrafiltration [ | Separation according to molecular size and shape | High speed, no special equipment, suitable for large samples | Not easy to distinguish components of similar size |
| Kit extraction method [ | Biological macromolecules are precipitated by using high molecular hydrophobic polymers | Suitable for large samples [ | High price and cost |
| Magnetic bead immunoassay [ | The immobilized antibody selectively binds to the antibody receptor on the exosome membrane to realize the separation | Well specificity [ | Not applicable to large samples |
| Size exclusion chromatography [ | Separation according to molecular size and size | Separation according to the particle size, high yield, and can ensure the integrity and biological activity of exosomes [ | Other methods shall be combined, and multiple samples cannot be operated at the same time |
| Microfluidic technology [ | According to the characteristics of exosomes, specific devices are used for separation | High speed, low cost, simple operation and easy automation | High material and technical requirements, high cost, not suitable for large samples |
Clinical application of natural targeting exosomes
| Targeting membrane protein | Targeting ligand/ Target cells | Function | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Integrin α4β7 | Hepatitis E virus endothelial cells | Inhibit the migration of gut-tropic T lymphocytes to the intestine | [ |
| Integrin α3β1 | The inner cyclic nine peptide LXY30 | Distinguish between cancer and non-cancer associated exosomes, and reduced the uptake of exosomes from SKOV-3 parent cells | [ |
| Integrin αvβ5 | Kupfer cells | Promote tumor metastasis to the liver | [ |
| Integrin α6β4 and Integrin α6β1 | The fibroblasts and epithelial cells of the lungs | Promote tumor metastasis to the lung | [ |
Fig. 2Exosomal membrane protein integrin induces its targeting metastasis
Engineering exosomes as drug delivery systems
| Targeting peptide/protein | Receptor | Target cells/organs | Function | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| IRGD peptide | Lamp2b | Breast cancer cell | Targeting delivery of DOX and effectively inhibit tumor growth | [ |
| CSTSMLKAC peptide | Lamp2b | Ischemic myocardium | Reduce inflammation, apoptosis and fibrosis, enhance angiogenesis, and cardiac function | [ |
| c (RgdyK) peptide | Integrin αvβ3 | Ischemic brain injury area | Targeting delivery of cur and inhibits the inflammatory response in lesion area | [ |
| RGE peptide | Neurokinin-1 | Glioma | Targeting delivery of cur | [ |
| c-Met binding peptide | c-Met | TNBC cells | Targeting delivery of DOX | [ |
| GE11 peptide | EGFR | Breast cancer cell | Targeting delivery of the tumor inhibitory miRNA | [ |
| RVG peptide | Lamp2b | Brain neurons, microglia and oligodendrocytes | Targeting delivery of siRNA and knockdown of Alzheimer’s disease related genes | [ |
| RVG peptide | Acetylcholine receptor | Neuron cell | Targeting delivery opioid receptor mu siRNA to treat morphine addiction | [ |
| Apo-A1 | SR-B1 receptor | Liver cancer cells | Targeting delivery Functional miR-26a | [ |
Fig. 3Engineered targeting exosomes as drug carriers for disease treatment. A In order to optimize the targeting of exosomes and enhance their specific targeting, we modified exosomes with targeting peptides. By constructing recombinant plasmids carrying targeting peptides, the obtained fusion proteins are transfected into cells and exosomes modified with targeting peptides are obtained, so that exosomes have stronger tissue or cell specificity, and therapeutic drugs are loaded into exosomes to achieve targeting and specific treatment of diseases. B Targeting modification of exosomes using the target protein. The targeting proteins are bound to the exosome membrane proteins. The drugs are loaded into exosomes, and the targeting delivery of drugs at specific sites is completed through the specific binding of target proteins to target cells. C Targeting exosomes with magnetic nanoparticles. Superparamagnetic nanoparticles are combined with exosomes to make exosomes magnetic, and drugs are loaded into exosomes with magnetic properties. Exosomes carrying drugs are enriched at specific sites under the action of external magnetic fields to achieve targeting delivery of drugs
Physically and chemically modified exosomes for targeting drug delivery
| Targeting ways/ligand | Targeting methods/receptor | Target cells/organs | Function | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Exosomes-SPION | The magnetic field in tumor site | Liver cancer | Targeting delivery of DOX and effectively inhibit tumor growth | [ |
| Exosomes-SPION | The magnetic field in tumor site | Melanoma | Targeting delivery of tumor necrosis factor and effectively inhibit tumor growth | [ |
| SIRPα | CD47 | Macrophages and tumor cells | Antagonizes the interaction between CD47 and SIRPα | [ |
| AA-PEG | Sigma receptor | Lung cancer cells | Targeting delivery of PTX | [ |
| Hydrophilic cholesterol coupled with RNA aptamer or folic acid | RNA ligand receptor / folate receptor | Cancer cells | Targeting delivery of siRNA and miRNA | [ |