| Literature DB >> 35053616 |
Frederic St-Denis-Bissonnette1,2, Rachil Khoury1,3,4, Karan Mediratta1,3,4, Sara El-Sahli1,3,4, Lisheng Wang1,3,4,5, Jessie R Lavoie1,2.
Abstract
Triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) is the most aggressive and refractory subtype of breast cancer, often occurring in younger patients with poor clinical prognosis. Given the current lack of specific targets for effective intervention, the development of better treatment strategies remains an unmet medical need. Over the last decade, the field of extracellular vesicles (EVs) has grown tremendously, offering immense potential for clinical diagnosis/prognosis and therapeutic applications. While TNBC-EVs have been shown to play an important role in tumorigenesis, chemoresistance and metastasis, they could be repurposed as potential biomarkers for TNBC diagnosis and prognosis. Furthermore, EVs from various cell types can be utilized as nanoscale drug delivery systems (NDDS) for TNBC treatment. Remarkably, EVs generated from specific immune cell subsets have been shown to delay solid tumour growth and reduce tumour burden, suggesting a new immunotherapy approach for TNBC. Intrinsically, EVs can cross the blood-brain barrier (BBB), which holds great potential to treat the brain metastases diagnosed in one third of TNBC patients that remains a substantial clinical challenge. In this review, we present the most recent applications of EVs in TNBC as diagnostic/prognostic biomarkers, nanoscale drug delivery systems and immunotherapeutic agents, as well as discuss the associated challenges and future directions of EVs in cancer immunotherapy.Entities:
Keywords: biomarkers; blood–brain barrier (BBB); cancer; chemotherapy; diagnosis; exosome; extracellular vesicles (EVs); immunotherapy; nanomedicine; nanoparticles (NPs); nanoscale drug delivery system (NDDS); prognosis; solid tumour; triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC)
Year: 2022 PMID: 35053616 PMCID: PMC8773485 DOI: 10.3390/cancers14020451
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639
Figure 1Summary of the potential applications of extracellular vesicles (EVs) in triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC). Panels (A,B) show the conventional surgery (panel A) for the treatment of TNBC metastasized to the brain and the proposed treatment approach via systemic administration of EVs panel (B). Panel (C) depicts a transversal view of a brain blood vessel in the tumour microenvironment of TNBC metastasized to the brain, highlighting that the TNBC-derived tumour-EVs (TNBC-TEVs) released into the blood could be used as biomarkers for diagnostic/prognostic purposes. Panel (D) shows a cross-section view of the same blood vessel, illustrating that only EVs are capable of crossing the blood–brain barrier (BBB) to target metastasized TNBC in the brain, but not naked drugs and conventional synthetic nanoparticles (NPs). Panel (E) illustrates the diagnostic/prognostic potential of TNBC-TEVs for none-metastatic TNBC in the mammary glands or TNBC metastasized to other organs outside the brain. Panel (F) shows that all naked drugs, synthetic NPs and EVs could cross blood vessels to TNBC tumors outside the brain. The diagnostic/prognostic biomarkers of TNBC-TEVs are listed in Table 1 and the therapeutic molecules delivered via various EV-NDDS for the treatment of TNBC are listed in Table 2. This figure was created with BioRender.com.
TNBC-TEVs encapsulating known RNA species and protein cargo with potential diagnosis/prognostic value.
| Cargo | Parental Cell Origin | Reported Effect and Outcomes in TNBC | Refs. |
|---|---|---|---|
| RNA Species | |||
| let-7a miRNA, miR-328, miR-130a, miR-149, miR-602, and miR-92b | MDA-MB-231 | Promotes tumorigenesis, invasion and metastasis | [ |
| miR-21 and miR-1246 | TNBC and BC patient serum | Promotes invasion, metastasis and chemoresistance | [ |
| miR-27b, miR-335, miR-376c, miR-382, miR-433, and miR-628 | TNBC patient serum | Various effect; high-throughput screening for miRNAs in TNBC-TEVs | [ |
| miR-7e, miR-10b, miR-32, miR-106b and miR-138 | MDA-MB-231 | Promotes invasion and metastasis | [ |
| miR-101 and miR-373 | TNBC patient serum | Downregulates ER expression and inhibits camptothecin-induced apoptosis | [ |
| miR-105 | MDA-MB-231 | Promotes invasion and metastasis by specifically targeting tight junction protein | [ |
| miR-122 | MDA-MB-231 | Promotes metastasis and the establishment of a pre-metastatic niche | [ |
| miR-134 | Hs578T | Reduces cancer aggressiveness and increases drug sensitivity | [ |
| miR-137 and miR-496 | MDA-MB-231 | Promotes proliferation and invasion | [ |
| miR-181c | MDA-MB-231-luc-D3H2LN | Promotes invasion and metastasis by disrupting the integrity of the BBB | [ |
| miR-200 | MDA-MB-231 | Promotes metastasis and the establishment of a pre-metastatic niche | [ |
| miR-223 | Macrophages | Promotes invasion via a positive feedback loop using EV communication platform | [ |
| miR-423-5p | MDA-MB-231 | Promotes chemoresistance | [ |
| miR-770 | MDA-MB-231 | Suppresses the DOX-resistance mechanism | [ |
| miR-939 | MDA-MB-231 | Regulates VE-cadherin in endothelial cells, which enhances cancer cell’s trans-endothelial migration | [ |
| circPSMA1 | MDA-MB-231 | Facilitates tumorigenesis, metastasis and migration via miR-637/Akt1/β-catenin (cyclin D1) axis | [ |
| lncRNA XIST | TNBC patient serum | Increases tumour recurrence | [ |
| Proteins | |||
| UCHL1 | Various TNBC cell lines, various PDX, TNBC patient-serum | Stimulates migration, extravasation and promotes tumor progression | [ |
| CD151 | MDA-MB-231 and TNBC patient-serum | Stimulates migration and invasion | [ |
| EGFR | MDA-MB-231 | Stimulates invasion | [ |
| Survivin | MDA-MB-231 | Promotes tumour survival | [ |
MDA-MB-231 and Hs578T are TNBC (ER-PR-HER2-) cell lines; MCF-7 is an ER+PR+HER2- cell line; UCHL1: ubiquitin carboxyl-terminal hydrolase isozyme L1; PDX: patient-derived xenografts; EGFR: epidermal growth factor receptor.
Cargo encapsulated in EV-NDDS for TNBC and BC treatment.
| Cargo Type | Cargo | Parental Cell | Receiving Cell | Reported Effect and Outcomes | Refs. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Small molecules | DOX | Immature DCs | MDA-MB-231 | Inhibiting tumour growth without overt toxicity | [ |
| DOX | MDA-MB-231 and STOSE ovarian cancer | MDA-MB-231 and STOSE ovarian cancer | EV-DOX is less toxic and allows treating mice at a higher concentration, reducing the volume of the tumour. | [ | |
| PTX and DOX | Macrophages | MDA-MB231 | Enhancing anti-proliferation effect | [ | |
| Curcumin | B16 (melanoma), TS/A (adenocarcinoma), and 4T.1 | NK cells | Restoring the strongest effect to the cytotoxic function of NK cells | [ | |
| β-Elemene | MCF-7 | MCF-7/Docetaxel MCF-7/Adriamycin | Significantly reversing the BC chemoresistance | [ | |
| Erastin | HFL-1 (normal human lung fibroblast) | MDA-MB231 | Robust accumulation of erastin and increasing killing effect | [ | |
| Nucleic acids | TPD52-siRNA | HEK293T | SKBR3 | siRNA downregulation of gene expression by 70% of cancer cells although no conclusion was drawn on the effect of this silencing | [ |
| VEGF-siRNA and let-7a miRNA | Primary DCs | MDA-MB-231 | Selectively targeting nucleolin-positive tumour tissues and inhibiting tumour growth | [ | |
| let-7a miRNA | HEK293 cells | HCC70 | Significantly inhibiting tumour growth | [ | |
| miR-127, miR-197, miR-222, and miR-223 | Bone marrow stroma | MDA-MB-231 | Enhancing anti-proliferation effect | [ | |
| miR-142-3p inhibitor | MSCs | 4T1 (mouse) | Efficiently delivering anti-miR-142-3p and restraining cancer proliferation | [ | |
| miR-9 and miR-155 | MDA-MB-231 | MCF-7 | Remarkably downregulating PTEN and DUSP14 in tumour cells | [ | |
| miR-381 | MSCs | MDA-MB-231 | Reducing cancer metastatic behaviours | [ | |
| miR-496 | MCF10A | MDA-MB-231 | Exerting a tumour suppressive role by targeting Del-1 | [ | |
| miR-424-5p | Adipose tissue-derived-MSCs | MDA-MB-231 | Promoting apoptosis of TNBC by suppressing PD-L1 signaling | [ | |
| Membrane-embedded molecules | Human IL-3Rα/CD123 Mab | Human TEC (thymic epithelial cells) | MDA-MB-231 | Reducing cell viability and cell migration | [ |
| HER2 | BT-474 | MDA-MB-231 | Receptor HER2 conferred on the surface of TNBC cells allowing for anti-HER2 antibody delivery therapy | [ |
Mab: monoclonal antibody; MDA-MB-231, Hs578T, HCC70 and 4TI (mouse) are TNBC (ER-PR-HER2-) cell lines; MCF-7 and SKBR3 are ER+PR+HER2- cell lines; MSCs: mesenchymal stromal/stem cells; PTX: paclitaxel; DOX: doxorubicin.
List of active and ongoing clinical trials investigating cancer vaccines for TNBC.
| Trial (National Clinical Trial ID) | Phase | Condition | Interventions |
|---|---|---|---|
| NCT03362060 | I | TNBC | Drug: Pembrolizumab |
| NCT02826434 | I | BC | Biological: PVX-410 |
| NCT04105582 | I | TNBC | Biological: Neo-antigen pulsed DCs |
| NCT02316457 | I | TNBC | Biological: IVAC_W_bre1_uID |
| NCT03199040 | I | TNBC | Drug: Durvalumab |
| NCT04024800 | II | TNBC | Biological: AE37 Peptide vaccine |
Pembrolizumab: FDA-approved anti-PD-1 antagonist monoclonal antibody; PVX-410 and AE37: investigational peptide therapeutic as cancer vaccine. IVAC_W_bre1_uID: Individualized Cancer Immunotherapy patient-specific liposome complexed RNA tailored to the antigen-expression profile of any given patient’s tumour. IVAC_M_uID: Individualized Cancer Immunotherapy treatment with de novo synthesized RNAs targeting up to 20 individual tumour mutations. TDS-IM system: a dermal DNA vaccine delivery system.
A comparison between EV-NDDS, synthetic NP-NDDS and naked drug delivery systems.
| Component | EV-NDDS | Synthetic NP-NDDS | Naked Drug | Refs. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Inherent ability to cross the BBB and cross from the bloodstream into the brain. | Yes | No * | No | [ |
| Susceptibility to the EPR effect (accumulation in tumour tissue). | Yes | Yes | No | [ |
| Ability to cross cellular barrier. | Yes | Varied | Low | [ |
| Improve intracellular penetration. | Yes | Yes | Varied | [ |
| Targeted delivery (tissue or cell type specific) and co-delivery of multiple agents. | Yes | Yes | N/A | [ |
| Application versatility (vaccine vehicle, immunotherapy, regenerative medicine, etc.). | Yes | Yes | N/A | [ |
| Improved pharmacological properties such as solubility, in vivo stability (circulating half-life), pharmacokinetic profile, protection of biologic drugs from premature release and degradation. | Yes | Yes | N/A | [ |
| Therapeutic index improvement either by increasing the efficacy or decreasing unwanted side effects. | Yes | Yes | N/A | [ |
| Cargo diversity (nucleic acids, proteins, lipids, drugs, etc.). | Yes | Yes | N/A | [ |
| Relative dosing. | Low | Low | High | [ |
| Susceptibility to sheer force during nebulization, lyophilization and other extreme handling processes. | Low | Low | Low | [ |
| Complexity of production, isolation and characterization. | Varied | Varied | Varied | [ |
| Prevention of antidrug antibodies formation. | Varied | Varied | N/A | [ |
| Responsiveness to the TME. | No | No | N/A | [ |
| Environmental toxicity. | Low | Varied | Varied | [ |
| Clinical toxicity. | Low | Varied | High | [ |
| Potency after systemic delivery, biodistribution and biocompatibility. | High | Varied * | Low | [ |
| Drug release versatility. | High | High | N/A | [ |
| Engineering potential (composition, targeted delivery, selective packing, etc.). | High | High | N/A | [ |
| Diagnostic potential. | Yes | Potentially | N/A | [ |
| Ability to evade immune detection. | Varied | Varied | N/A | [ |
| Potential to cause graft-vs.-host disease (GvHD). | Depends on producer cell | Unlikely | N/A | [ |
| Intrinsic diversity. | High | Low | N/A | [ |
* Depending on surface coating.