| Literature DB >> 35012489 |
Karin Ekström1,2, Rossella Crescitelli3,4, Hafsteinn Ingi Pétursson3,4, Junko Johansson3,4, Cecilia Lässer5, Roger Olofsson Bagge3,4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Breast cancer is the most common cancer, and the leading cause of cancer-related deaths, among females world-wide. Recent research suggests that extracellular vesicles (EVs) play a major role in the development of breast cancer metastasis. Axillary lymph node dissection (ALND) is a procedure in patients with known lymph node metastases, and after surgery large amounts of serous fluid are produced from the axilla. The overall aim was to isolate and characterize EVs from axillary serous fluid, and more specifically to determine if potential breast cancer biomarkers could be identified.Entities:
Keywords: Breast cancer; Exosomes; Extracellular vesicles; Flow cytometry; Lymphatic drainage exudate; Multiplex phenotyping
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35012489 PMCID: PMC8744234 DOI: 10.1186/s12885-021-08870-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Cancer ISSN: 1471-2407 Impact factor: 4.430
Patient characteristics
| Patient | Gender | Age | Breast cancer | NACT /Response# | Breast surgery | Axillary surgery | Histology | Tumor Size (mm) | NHG | ER+ | PR+ | HER2 | LVI | Positive |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Female | 72.4 | Primary | Yes/Grade 2 | Mastectomy | FNB- > ALND | Lobular | 60 | 2 | 100 | 80 | Neg | No | 18 |
| 2 | Female | 86.1 | Primary | No | Mastectomy | FNB- > ALND | Ductal | 21 | 3 | 100 | 0 | Neg | Yes | 3 |
| 3 | Female | 40.5 | Primary | No | Mastectomy | SNB- > ALND | Ductal | 4 | 3 | 30 | 0 | Pos | No | 1 |
| 4 | Female | 45.3 | Primary | Yes/Grade 5 | BCS | FNB- > ALND | Ductal | 0 | 3 | 15 | 0 | Pos | No | 0 |
| 5 | Female | 69.0 | Primary | No | BCS | SNB- > ALND | Ductal | 17 | 2 | 90 | 100 | Neg | No | 1 |
| 6 | Female | 70.0 | Primary | No | Mastectomy | FNB- > ALND | Ductal | 43 | 2 | 95 | 95 | Pos | Yes | 4 |
| 7 | Female | 66.3 | Axillary recurrence | No | None | FNB- > ALND | Lobular | N/A | N/A | 100 | 0 | Neg | N/A | 2 |
ALND axillary lymph node dissection, BCS Breast conserving surgery, ER estrogen receptor, FNB fine needle biopsy, HER2 human epidermal growth factor receptor 2, LVI lymphovascular invasion, NACT neoadjuvant chemotherapy, NHG Nottingham histological grade, PR progesterone receptor, SNB sentinel node biopsy. #according to Miller-Payne criteria for grading response.

Evaluation of EV enriched fractions after SEC isolation of EVs from lymphatic drainage fluid from breast cancer patients. EVs were isolated from lymphatic drainage fluid of three patients (patient 3, 5 and 6) collected 1 day after breast surgery using qEV SEC. Seven fractions were collected, concentrated using ultrafiltration and analyzed. A Total particle number and protein amount and B particle to protein ratio in each of the 7 fractions analyzed by NTA and protein quantification by Qubit. C Fraction 1–7 (F1–7) were analyzed further by western blot (loading 20 μg except for F1 in patient 4 and 6 where the maximum volume was loaded (2.5 and 3.4 μg respectively) due to low protein concentration) detecting the EV markers Flotillin and CD63, endoplasmic reticulum marker Grp94, lipoprotein ApoA1 and albumin. EV proteins Flotillin and CD63 were mainly localized in F2–4, and non-EV proteins ApoA1 in F5–7. Albumin and Grp94 were not detected in any of the fractions. The positive control used was proteins extracted from MSC cell lysate (Grp94 and Flotillin-1), EVs from mesenchymal stem cells (CD63), human melanoma metastatic tissue (albumin and ApoA1). Western blot membranes are cropped, uncropped membranes are shown in Additional file 7. D TEM images of qEV fractions 1–7, patient 3 and 6. Size bar; 200 nm. Some of the vesicle-shaped particles are indicated by yellow arrows. EVs were mainly present in F1–3, while in F4–7, smaller, lipoprotein-like particles were covering most of the TEM grid. Values are mean values of the three patients and error bars indicates standard error of the mean
Fig. 2EVs isolated from lymphatic drainage fluid from breast cancer patients by SEC isolation. EVs were isolated from lymphatic drainage fluid of seven breast cancer patients using qEV SEC. EV-containing fractions were collected, pooled, concentrated using ultrafiltration and analyzed further. A EV particle number and protein amount isolated per ml of lymphatic drainage fluid from each of the 7 patients as analyzed by nFCM and Qubit. B Size distribution of EVs from patient 1 as analyzed by nFCM. C Western shows the presence of EV proteins CD63 and Flotillin and absence of albumin in EVs isolated from all patients. All EV samples contained lipoprotein ApoA1. The positive control used for albumin was human melanoma metastatic tissue and 9–10 μg protein was loaded in each lane. Western blot membranes are cropped, uncropped membranes are shown in Additional file 7. D TEM images show vesicle-like structure in the size range of 30–200 nm in EVs isolated from the breast cancer patients. Size bar, 200 nm
Fig. 3Surface marker profile of EVs isolated from lymphatic drainage fluid obtained from breast cancer patients. EV surface proteins were profiled using multiplex bead-based flow cytometry assay. Captured EVs were counterstained with APC-labeled detection antibodies (mixture of anti-CD9, anti-CD63, and anti-CD81 antibodies). The 24 out of 37 proteins that were found to be positive (MFI > 20) in any of the patients are shown in the figure. Data is presented as CD9/CD63/CD81 normalized background subtracted (isotype control and blank samples) median fluorescence intensity (MFI). Asterisks indicate proteins detected in all patients
Proteins detected in EVs from all 7 breast cancer patients
| EV markers | Platelet markers | Cancer-related proteins | MHC class II |
|---|---|---|---|
| CD9 | CD41b | CD24 | HLA-DR |
| CD63 | CD42a | CD29 | HLA-DP |
| CD81 | CD62pa | CD44 | HLA-DQ |
| CD146 |
Proteins above the detection limit (background corrected MFI > 20) in all patients are shown in the table. aactivation marker.
Proteins detected by multiplex bead-based flow in EVs in at least 5 of 7 patients
| Protein | Cellular expression | Extra information | Present in number of patients | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CD9 | Platelets, pre-B-cells, eosinophils, basophils, activated T-cells, endothelial and epithelial cells | EV marker, belonging to the tetraspanin family. It can modulate cell adhesion and migration, and is suggested to have a function in breast cancer metastasis. | 7 | [ |
| CD29 (Integrin beta 1) | Leukocytes, mesenchymal stem cells, cancer stem cells | Cell adhesion molecule and a marker of cancer stem cells. CD29 expression on EVs has been shown to be increased in breast cancer tissues. | 7 | [ |
| CD42a | Platelets and megakaryocytes | Platelet marker. Platelets are suggested to be involved in all steps of tumorigenesis including tumor growth, tumor cell extravasation and metastasis. Platelet EVs have been shown to have a pro-coagulant function and be associated with aggressive tumors and poor prognosis. | 7 | [ |
| CD44 | Various cells of different origins, e.g. cancer stem cells, hematopoetic cells and cells in the epidermis. | A cell adhesion molecule, receptor for e.g. hyaluronic acid. Highly expressed in many cancers. It has a role in cell migration, tumor growth and progression. It has been detected on EVs derived from plasma from breast cancer patients. | 7 | [ |
| CD62p (P-selectin) | Activated endothelial cells, platelets and megakaryocytes | Activation marker, expressed on activated endothelial cells and platelets. Associated with a high risk of venous thrombosis in cancer patients. | 5 | [ |
| CD63 | Activated platelets, monocytes, macrophages, granulocytes, and endothelial cells | EV marker, belonging to the tetraspanin family. | 7 | [ |
| CD81 | B- and T-cells, NK cells, monocytes, thymocytes, DCs, endothelial cells, and fibroblasts | EV marker, belonging to the tetraspanin family. | 7 | [ |
| CD105 | Mature endothelial cells, mesenchymal stem cells, erythroid precursors, activated monocytes and macrophages. Plasma levels of soluble CD105 have been shown to correlate with metastasis in patients with breast cancer | Accessory receptor for transforming growth factor beta (TGF-β). Marker of cancer stem cells. It has a crucial role in angiogenesis, making it an important protein for tumor growth, survival and metastasis. Plasma levels of soluble CD105 have been shown to correlate with metastasis patients with breast cancer. | 5 | [ |
| CD146 (MCAM) | Endothelial cells, pericytes, smooth muscle cells, follicular DC, melanoma cells, subpopulation of activated T-cells, marrow stromal cells (MSCs) | Cell adhesion molecule involved in the induction of epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition in breast cancer. Associated with high-grade tumors in breast cancer. | 7 | [ |
| CD24 | B-cells, granulocytes, epithelial cells, monocytes, neuroblasts | Cell adhesion molecule, high levels in breast cancer tissue has been associated with poor prognosis. | 7 | [ |
| CD31 (PECAM-1) | Monocytes, platelets, granulocytes, endothelial cells, lymphocyte subsets, and epithelial cells | Platelet endothelial cell adhesion molecule (PECAM-1). Used as marker of angiogenesis. | 5 | [ |
| CD40 | B-cells, monocytes, macrophages, follicular DCs, endothelial cells, fibroblasts, and keratinocytes | Costimulatory protein found on antigen-presenting cells and is required for their activation. High expression correlates with overall survival in various types of cancer. | 5 | [ |
| CD41b | Platelets and megakaryocytes | Platelet marker, cell adhesion. | 7 | [ |
| CD49e (Integrin alpha 5) | Thymocytes, T-cells, early activated B-cells, monocytes, platelets, fibroblasts, endothelial, and epithelial cells | Member of the integrin family. CD49e associates with CD29 (integrin β1 chain) to form the fibronectin receptor (Integrin α5β1). Integrin α5β1 has a role in carcinogenesis and cancer progression, and has been shown to be up-regulated in breast cancer cells, while functioning as tumor suppressors in some types of cancer and in cancer cell lines. | 6 | [ |
| MCSP (CSPG4) | Some cancer cells | Transmembrane proteoglycan. Expressed in breast cancer. High level in breast cancer tissue has been suggested to correlate with poor outcome. | 6 | [ |
| HLA-DR-DP-DQ | Antigen presenting cells and activated T cells | MHC class II, antigen presentation | 7 | |
Cellular expression adapted from [61]
Fig. 4Principal component analysis (PCA) and hierarchical clustering heatmap of EV surface proteins detected by MACSPlex analysis. EV surface proteins detected by MACSPlex analysis in any of the patients were analyzed further using the bioinformatics software Qlucore. A-B) PCA illustrates the relationship between the technical replicates and variation between different patients were A shows connection between 1 nearest neighbor and B 3 nearest neighbors. C Hierarchical clustering heatmap of mean values for each patient. As illustrated by both PCA and heatmap, patient 2, 3, and 5 cluster together, and patient 1, 4, 6 and 7 cluster together
Fig. 5Comparison of surface protein expression in EVs from Her2 positive and Her2 negative patients show that CD29 and CD146 are increased in Her2 positive patients. A Background corrected CD9/CD63/CD81 normalized intensity signal for the surface proteins CD29 and CD146 that differed between Her2+ and Her2- patients in the MACSPlex analysis. (B-C) CD146 was further evaluated by western blot (10 μg protein was loaded in each lane except for patient 2 where 9 μg was used due to low protein concentration). B Western blot and C the normalized western blot quantification for CD146. Western blot membranes in the figure were cropped, uncropped membranes and the unstained gel used for the normalization are shown in Additional file 7. The Imaging and data analysis was done in Image Lab™ Software (Bio-Rad Laboratories). CD146 was normalized and quantified by Stain-Free Total Protein Quantitation and the normalized volume intensity values are shown in the figure. Results shown as mean values and standard deviation. **p < 0.01, q < 0.01