| Literature DB >> 35255950 |
Kai Zhao1, Xiangyu Li1, Yuanxin Shi1, Yun Lu1, Peng Qiu1, Zhengdong Deng1, Wei Yao2, Jianming Wang3,4.
Abstract
Cholangiocarcinoma (CCA) refers to an aggressive malignancy with a high fatality rate and poor prognosis. Globally, the morbidity of CCA is increasing for the past few decades, which has progressed into a disease that gravely endangers human health. Exosomes belong to a class of extracellular vesicles (EVs) with diameters ranging from 40 to 150 nm that can be discharged by all living cells. As communication messengers of the intercellular network, exosomes carry a diverse range of cargoes such as proteins, nucleic acids, lipids, and metabolic substances, which are capable of conveying biological information across different cell types to mediate various physiological activities or pathological changes. Increasing studies have demonstrated that exosomes in the tumor microenvironment participate in regulating tumorigenesis and progression via multiple approaches in the tumor microenvironment. Here, we reviewed the current research progress of exosomes in the context of cancer and particularly highlighted their functions in modulating the development of CCA. Furthermore, the potential values of exosomes as diagnostic and therapeutic targets in CCA were overviewed as well.Entities:
Keywords: Biomarker; Cholangiocarcinoma; Exosomes; Liquid biopsy; Targeted therapy; Tumor microenvironment
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35255950 PMCID: PMC8900430 DOI: 10.1186/s12967-022-03294-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Transl Med ISSN: 1479-5876 Impact factor: 5.531
Fig. 1Biogenesis, secretion, and internalization of exosomes. The formation of exosomes initially depends on the invagination of the plasma membrane, followed by the generation of ILVs and MVBs. Once mature, MVBs can fuse with lysosomes and be degraded, or integrate with the plasma membrane and finally get released, i.e., exosomes. During this process of synthesis and secretion, ESCRT-dependent and ESCRT-independent mechanisms are two common approaches, other components like the Rab family of GTPases, SNARE, ceramide, and tetraspanins are also involved. Exosomes can be uptake by receptor cells to perform specific functions through various mechanisms, such as phagocytosis, macro-pinocytosis, ligand-receptor interaction, CME, and CDE. As plasma membrane-derived vesicles with lipid bilayer structure, exosomes carry a variety of components, including RNAs (mRNA, MiRNA, LncRNA, and CircRNA), proteins (TSG101, Alix, HSP, CD9, CD63, and CD81) and metabolites, etc.
Fig. 2The functional network of exosomes in the CCA microenvironment. Exosomes secreted by cancer cells facilitate tumor angiogenesis by transferring Circ-CCAC1 to endothelial cells. Cancer cell-derived exosomes induce BMSCs to differentiate into CAFs to promote tumor stroma formation, and normal fibroblasts can also be activated through their miRNA cargoes, like miR-34c. Other RNAs cargoes, such as Circ-0000284 can promote tumor development by inducing a malignant transformation of normal cholangiocytes, while miR-30e-enriched exosomes inhibit tumor progression via suppressing EMT. Similarly, exosomes derived from Hepatic stellate cells exert an anti-tumor effect by transferring miR-195. Certain protein components in exosomes can also promote tumor proliferation and metastasis, like FZD10. CIKs absorb exosomes to promote tumor immune escape by reducing the secretion of TNF-α and perforin
Exosomes as diagnostic and prognostic biomarkers in cholangiocarcinoma
| Biomarker | Molecule type | Expression (compared to control group) | Location | Sample | Case group | Control group | Diagnosis/Prognosis | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| miR-604, miR-551b | miRNA | Up-regulated | Serum | 12 CCA patients, 6 PSC patients, 8 UC patients, 9 Healthy controls | CCA patients (n = 12) | PSC patients (n = 6), UC patients (n = 8), Healthy individuals (n = 9) | Diagnosis | [ |
| miR-141-3p, miR-200a-3p, miR-200b-3p, miR-200c-3p | miRNA | Up-regulated | Serum | 36 CCA patients, 12 Healthy controls | CCA patients (n = 36) | Healthy controls (n = 12) | Diagnosis and prognosis | [ |
| miR-199 family, miR-214-3p | miRNA | Down-regulated | CCA cell supernatant | human CCA cells, normal human cholangiocytes | human CCA cells | normal human cholangiocytes | Diagnosis and prognosis | [ |
| miR-96-5p, miR-151a-5p, miR-191-5p, miR-4732-3p | miRNA | Up-regulated | Blood | 45 CCA patients, 40 Healthy controls | CCA patients (n = 45) | Healthy controls (n = 40) | Diagnosis | [ |
| LncRNA MALAT1 | LncRNA | Up-regulated | Serum | 12 CCA patients, 6 PSC patients, 8 UC patients, 9 Healthy controls | CCA patients (n = 12) | PSC patients (n = 6), UC patients (n = 8), Healthy individuals (n = 9) | Diagnosis | [ |
| ENST00000588480.1/ENST00000517758.1 | LncRNA | Up-regulated | Bile | 35 CCA patients, 56 Biliary obstruction patients | CCA patients (n = 35) | Biliary obstruction patients (n = 56) | Diagnosis and prognosis | [ |
| Cripto-1 | mRNA | Up-regulated | Serum | 115 PHCCA patients, 47 cholangitis patients, 65 Healthy controls | PHCCA patients (n = 115) | Cholangitis patients (n = 47), Healthy individuals (n = 65) | Diagnosis and prognosis | [ |
| UBE2C, SERPINB1 | mRNA | Up-regulated | Urine | 23 CCA patients, 5 PSC patients, 12 UC patients, 5 Healthy controls | CCA patients (n = 23) | PSC patients (n = 5), UC patients (n = 12), Healthy individuals (n = 5) | Diagnosis | [ |
| CMIP, GAD1, NDKP1, CDS1, CKS1B | mRNA | Up-regulated | Serum | 12 CCA patients, 6 PSC patients, 8 UC patients, 9 Healthy controls | CCA patients (n = 12) | PSC patients (n = 6), UC patients (n = 8), Healthy individuals (n = 9) | Diagnosis | [ |
| AMPN, VNN1, PIGR | Protein | Up-regulated | Serum | 43 CCA patients, 32 Healthy controls | CCA patients (n = 43) | Healthy individuals (n = 32) | Diagnosis | [ |
| FIBG, A1AG1, S100A8 | Protein | Up-regulated | Serum | 43 CCA patients, 30 PSC patients | CCA patients (n = 43) | PSC patients (n = 30) | Diagnosis | [ |
| HSP90 | Protein | Low phosphorylated | CCA cell supernatant | human CCA cell lines: KKU-M213(M213) and KKU-M213D5 (M213D5) | M213D5 cells (highly invasive) | M213 cells | Diagnosis and prognosis | [ |
| Claudin-3 | Protein | Up-regulated | Bile | 10 CCA patients, 10 Choledocholithiasis patients | CCA patients (n = 10) | Choledocholithiasis patients (n = 10) | Diagnosis | [ |
MALAT1 metastasis associated lung adenocarcinoma transcript 1, Cripto-1 teratocarcinoma-derived growth factor 1 (TDGF-1), UBE2C ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme E2C, SERPINB1 serine protease inhibitor B1, CMIP c-Maf inducing protein, GAD1 glutamate decarboxylase 1, NDKP1 nucleoside diphosphate kinase 1, CDS1 CDP-diacylglycerol synthase 1, CKS1B cyclin-dependent kinase regulatory subunit 1, AMPN aminopeptidase N, VNN1 pantetheinase, PIGR polymeric immunoglobulin receptor, FIBG fibrinogen gamma chain, A1AG1 alpha1-acid glycoprotein 1, S100A8 S100 calcium binding protein A8, PSC primary sclerosing cholangitis, UC ulcerative colitis, PHCCA perihilar cholangiocarcinoma