| Literature DB >> 35159299 |
Sadaf Jahan1, Shouvik Mukherjee2, Shaheen Ali2, Urvashi Bhardwaj2, Ranjay Kumar Choudhary1, Santhanaraj Balakrishnan3, Asma Naseem1, Shabir Ahmad Mir1, Saeed Banawas1,4, Mohammed Alaidarous1, Hadeel Alyenbaawi1, Danish Iqbal1, Arif Jamal Siddiqui5.
Abstract
Cancer is one of the leading diseases, causing deaths worldwide. Nearly 10 million deaths were reported in 2020 due to cancer alone. Several factors are involved in cancer progressions, such as lifestyle and genetic characteristics. According to a recent report, extracellular vesicles (EVs) are involved in cancer initiation, progression, and therapy failure. EVs can play a major role in intracellular communication, the maintenance of tissue homeostasis, and pathogenesis in several types of diseases. In a healthy person, EVs carry different cargoes, such as miRNA, lncRNA etc., to help other body functions. On the other hand, the same EV in a tumor microenvironment carries cargoes such as miRNA, lncRNA, etc., to initiate or help cancer progression at various stages. These stages may include the proliferation of cells and escape from apoptosis, angiogenesis, cell invasion, and metastasis, reprogramming energy metabolism, evasion of the immune response, and transfer of mutations. Tumor-derived EVs manipulate by altering normal functions of the body and affect the epigenetics of normal cells by limiting the genetic makeup through transferring mutations, histone modifications, etc. Tumor-derived EVs also pose therapy resistance through transferring drug efflux pumps and posing multiple drug resistances. Such EVs can also help as biomarkers for different cancer types and stages, which ultimately help with cancer diagnosis at early stages. In this review, we will shed light on EVs' role in performing normal functions of the body and their position in different hallmarks of cancer, in altering the genetics of a normal cell in a tumor microenvironment, and their role in therapy resistance, as well as the importance of EVs as diagnostic tools.Entities:
Keywords: angiogenesis; cancer; diagnostic tools; exosomes; extracellular vesicles; immune response; long non-coding RNAs; metastasis; miRNA
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35159299 PMCID: PMC8833976 DOI: 10.3390/cells11030490
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cells ISSN: 2073-4409 Impact factor: 6.600
List of source and functions of EVs (cargoes) released from normal cells.
| S. No. | Source of EVs | Functions of EVs/EV Cargoes | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | CD9-containing vesicles | Sperm and egg fusion | [ |
| 2 | Oocyte | Remove sperm receptor to prevent polyspermy | [ |
| 3 | Embryonic stem cells | EVs to communicate with environment in blastocyst; trophoblast migration and invasive properties | [ |
| 4 | B Lymphocytes | To activate T cells | [ |
| 5 | Antigen-presenting cells | RNA cargo influencing immune cell behavior | [ |
| 6 | Dendritic cells | miRNA cargo represses mRNA expression target in acceptor dendritic cells | [ |
| 7 | Regulatory T cells | miRNA cargo suppresses inflammatory responses of helper T1 cells | [ |
| 8 | Neurons and glia cells | Facilitate intercellular communication | [ |
| 9 | Neurons | mi-124a cargo uptake by astrocytes upregulates expression of GLT1 | [ |
| 10 | Oligodendrocytes | Neurons intake myelin proteins and oxidative stress-protective proteins, causing changes in neuronal firing rates and gene-expression profiles | [ |
| 11 | Oligodendrocyte | Inhibiting differentiation and myelin formation | [ |
| 12 | Schwann cells | Enhance regeneration capacity after sciatic nerve injury | [ |
| 13 | Microglia | Suppress the production of sphingolipid ceramides and sphingosine to regulate neuronal excitability | [ |
| 14 | Cells of human blood from wound site | EVs expose a highly procoagulant tissue factor, implying that EVs play a role in hemostasis | [ |
| 15 | Endothelial cells | Matrix metalloproteinases cargoes enhance matrix degradation and promotes angiogenesis | [ |
| 16 | Platelets | Promotes cell proliferation, the migration of endothelial cells, and vessel formation | [ |
| 17 | Lymphocyte-derived EVs | Prohibits VEGF pathway and, thus, suppresses angiogenesis and augments oxidative stress | [ |
| 18 | Stem-cell-derived EVs | Bioactive cargoes have regenerative abilities | [ |
Figure 1Diagrammatic representation of EVs’ role in influencing different hallmarks of cancer.
List of cancer types and released EVs cargo and their role in cancer hallmarks.
| S. No. | Cancer Type | EV Cargo Type | Role/Cancer Hallmarks | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Acute Leukemia | miR-116 | Cell proliferation and escape from apoptosis | [ |
| 2 | Acute Leukemia | miR-118 | Cell proliferation and escape from apoptosis | [ |
| 3 | Brain cancer | miR-181c | Cell invasion and metastasis | [ |
| 4 | Breast cancer | miR-1246 | Cell proliferation and escape from apoptosis | [ |
| 5 | Breast cancer | miR-210 | Sustaining of angiogenesis | [ |
| 6 | Breast cancer | miR-200 family | Cell invasion and metastasis (also highly involved in epithelial to mesenchymal transition) | [ |
| 7 | Breast cancer | miR- 205 | Cell invasion and metastasis (also highly involved in epithelial to mesenchymal transition) | [ |
| 8 | Breast cancer | Caveolin-1 | Cell invasion and metastasis | [ |
| 9 | Breast cancer | miR-122 | Reprogramming energy metabolism | [ |
| 10 | Breast cancer | GSTP1 | Reprogramming energy metabolism | [ |
| 11 | Breast cancer | miR-122 | Reprogramming energy metabolism | [ |
| 12 | Cholangiocarcinoma | miR-205 | Cell proliferation and escape from apoptosis | [ |
| 13 | Cholangiocarcinoma | miR-205-5p | Cell invasion | [ |
| 14 | Colon cancer | DeltaNp73 | Cell proliferation and escape from apoptosis | [ |
| 15 | Colon cancer | miR-193a | Cell proliferation and escape from apoptosis | [ |
| 16 | Colon cancer | miR-200b | Cell proliferation and escape from apoptosis | [ |
| 17 | Colon cancer | miR-25-3p | Sustaining of angiogenesis | [ |
| 18 | Colon cancer | Wnt5b | Cell invasion and metastasis | [ |
| 19 | Colon cancer | AREG | Cell invasion and metastasis | [ |
| 20 | Colon cancer | β-catenin (mutant) | Transfer mutations | [ |
| 21 | Colon cancer | miR-1246 | Evade immune response and promote inflammation | [ |
| 22 | Colon cancer | Carcinoembryonic antigen related cell adhesion molecule | Evade immune response and promote inflammation | [ |
| 23 | Colorectal cancer | miR-10b | Evade immune response and promote inflammation | [ |
| 24 | Colorectal cancer | lnRNA PVT1 | Cell proliferation and escape from apoptosis | [ |
| 25 | Colorectal cancer | miR200b | Cell proliferation and escape from apoptosis | [ |
| 26 | Esophageal cancer | miR-93-5p | Cell proliferation and escape from apoptosis | [ |
| 27 | Esophageal cancer | miR-21 | Cell proliferation and escape from apoptosis | [ |
| 28 | Esophageal cancer | lncZEB1-AS1 | Cell proliferation and escape from apoptosis | [ |
| 29 | Gastric cancer | lncRNAZFAS1 | Cell proliferation and escape from apoptosis | [ |
| 30 | Gastric cancer | miR-423-5p | Cell invasion and metastasis | [ |
| 31 | Gastric cancer | miR-27a | Evade immune response and promote inflammation | [ |
| 32 | Glioblastoma | RBM11 (splicing factor) | Cell proliferation and escape from apoptosis | [ |
| 33 | Glioblastoma | CLIC1 | Cell proliferation and escape from apoptosis | [ |
| 34 | Glioblastoma | lncRNA CCAT2 | Sustaining of angiogenesis | [ |
| 35 | Glioblastoma | lncRNA POU3F3 | Sustaining of angiogenesis | [ |
| 36 | Glioblastoma | miR-21 (VEGF- upregulate expression) | Sustaining of angiogenesis | [ |
| 37 | Glioblastoma | CXCR4 | Sustaining of angiogenesis | [ |
| 38 | Glioblastoma | miR-148a | Cell invasion and metastasis | [ |
| 39 | Glioblastoma | PTPRZ1-MET (fusion gene) | Transfer mutations | [ |
| 40 | Glioblastoma | EGFRvIII | Transfer mutations | [ |
| 41 | Glioblastoma | miR-210 | Evade immune response and promote inflammation | [ |
| 42 | Glioblastoma | PD-L1 | Evade immune response and promote inflammation | [ |
| 43 | Head-and-neck squamous cell carcinoma | EPHB2 | Sustaining of angiogenesis | [ |
| 44 | Hepatocellular carcinoma | lncRNA TUC339 | Cell proliferation and escape from apoptosis | [ |
| 45 | Hepatocellular carcinoma | CXCR4 | Cell proliferation and escape from apoptosis | [ |
| 46 | Hepatocellular carcinoma | SMAD3 | Cell proliferation and escape from apoptosis | [ |
| 47 | Hepatocellular carcinoma | miR-93 | Cell proliferation and escape from apoptosis | [ |
| 48 | Hepatocellular carcinoma | miR-103 | Cell proliferation and escape from apoptosis | [ |
| 49 | Hepatocellular carcinoma | miR-584 | Cell proliferation and escape from apoptosis | [ |
| 50 | Hepatocellular carcinoma | miR-517c | Cell proliferation and escape from apoptosis | [ |
| 51 | Hepatocellular carcinoma | miR-378 | Cell proliferation and escape from apoptosis | [ |
| 52 | Hepatocellular carcinoma | miR-520f | Cell proliferation and escape from apoptosis | [ |
| 53 | Hepatocellular carcinoma | miR-142-5p | Cell proliferation and escape from apoptosis | [ |
| 54 | Hepatocellular carcinoma | miR-451 | Cell proliferation and escape from apoptosis | [ |
| 55 | Hepatocellular carcinoma | miR-518d | Cell proliferation and escape from apoptosis | [ |
| 56 | Hepatocellular carcinoma | miR-215 | Cell proliferation and escape from apoptosis | [ |
| 57 | Hepatocellular carcinoma | miR-376a | Cell proliferation and escape from apoptosis | [ |
| 58 | Hepatocellular carcinoma | miR-133b | Cell proliferation and escape from apoptosis | [ |
| 59 | Hepatocellular carcinoma | miR-367 | Cell proliferation and escape from apoptosis | [ |
| 60 | Hepatocellular carcinoma | Vasorin | Sustaining of angiogenesis | [ |
| 61 | Hepatocellular carcinoma | miR-103 | Sustaining of angiogenesis | [ |
| 62 | Hepatocellular carcinoma | miR-21 | Evade immune response and promote inflammation | [ |
| 63 | Leukemia | miR-20b | Cell proliferation and escape from apoptosis | [ |
| 64 | Liposarcoma | miR-25-3p | Evade immune response and promote inflammation | [ |
| 65 | Liposarcoma | miR-92a-3p | Evade immune response and promote inflammation | [ |
| 66 | Lung cancer | miR-143-3p | Sustaining of angiogenesis | [ |
| 67 | Lung cancer | miR-145-5p | Sustaining of angiogenesis | [ |
| 68 | Lung cancer | miR-23a | Sustaining of angiogenesis | [ |
| 69 | Lung cancer | miR-142-3p | Evade immune response and promote inflammation | [ |
| 70 | Melanoma | PGDRF- β | Cell proliferation and escape from apoptosis | [ |
| 71 | Melanoma | Programmed cell death protein 1 and cytotoxic T lymphocyte associated antigen-4 | Cell proliferation and escape from apoptosis | [ |
| 72 | Melanoma | ALK isoform | Transfer mutations | [ |
| 73 | Melanoma | miR-155-5p | Evade immune response and promote inflammation | [ |
| 74 | Multiple myeloma | piRNA-823 | Sustaining of angiogenesis | [ |
| 75 | Nasopharyngeal carcinoma | miR-23a | Sustaining of angiogenesis | [ |
| 76 | Nasopharyngeal carcinoma | miR-24-3p | Evade immune response and promote inflammation | [ |
| 77 | Nasopharyngeal carcinoma | Galactin-9 | Evade immune response and promote inflammation | [ |
| 78 | Oral cancer | miR-142-3p | Sustaining of angiogenesis | [ |
| 79 | Osteosarcoma | miR-675 | Evade immune response and promote inflammation | [ |
| 80 | Ovarian cancer | miR-99a-5p | Cell invasion and metastasis | [ |
| 81 | Ovarian cancer | SMAD4 | Transfer mutations | [ |
| 82 | Ovarian cancer | miR-1246 | Evade immune response and promote inflammation | [ |
| 83 | Ovarian cancer | Arginase-1 | Evade immune response and promote inflammation | [ |
| 84 | Ovarian carcinoma | miR-141-3p | Sustaining of angiogenesis | [ |
| 85 | Ovarian serous carcinoma | miR-21 | Cell proliferation and escape from apoptosis | [ |
| 86 | Pancreatic cancer | miR-23b-5p | Cell proliferation and escape from apoptosis | [ |
| 87 | Papillary thyroid cancer | miR-146b | Cell proliferation | [ |
| 88 | Papillary thyroid cancer | miR-222 | Cell proliferation | [ |
| 89 | Prostate cancer | miR1246 | Cell invasion and metastasis | [ |
| 90 | Renal cell carcinoma | Fas ligand | Evade immune response and promote inflammation | [ |
Figure 2Diagrammatic representation showing how cancer cell-derived EVs promote tumorigenesis in normal cells and later help the drug-sensitive cells to transform into drug-resistant cells, thus owing to failed chemotherapy.
List of proteins/enzymes from EVs and their role in cancer drug resistance.
| S. No. | Protein/Enzyme from EVs | Role | Cancer | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Glutathione S-transferases (GSTs) | Use glutathione conjugation to detoxify anticancer drugs | Breast cancer | [ |
| 2 | P-gp (MDR1) | Drug efflux | Leukemia | [ |
| 3 | TrpC5 | Transcriptional activation of the | Breast Cancer (MCF7) | [ |
| 4 | Ezrin | Modulate P-gp | Lung cancer | [ |
| 5 | Radixin | Modulate P-gp | Colon cancer | [ |
| 6 | Moesin | Modulate P-gp | Breast cancer | [ |
| 7 | CD44 | Modulate P-gp | Colon cancer | [ |
| 8 | Multidrug-resistance-associated proteins (MRP1-9/ABCCs) | Drug efflux | Lung cancer | [ |
| 9 | ABCG2 | Mediates the efficient pumping and concentration of multiple cytotoxic agents | Breast cancer | [ |
| 10 | Galectin-3 | Activation of NF- | Neck cancer | [ |
| 11 | Carbonic anhydrase XII (CA XII) | Co-expressed and co-located with P-gp | Renal cancer | [ |
| 12 | UCH-L1 | Upregulate P-gp protein expression levels via the MAPK/ERK signaling pathway | Breast cancer | [ |
Figure 3Diagrammatic representation revealing EVs’ role as biomarkers, vaccines, and in different therapies.