| Literature DB >> 35637970 |
Wei Zhang1, Xiaoxiao Zheng2, Yisong Yu3, Li Zheng2, Jiahua Lan2, Ying Wu2, Hao Liu2, An Zhao4, Hang Huang5, Wei Chen2.
Abstract
Tumor-derived exosomes play a pivotal role in regulating tumor progression by mediating crosstalk between tumor cells and immune cells such as macrophages within the tumor microenvironment. Macrophages can adopt two distinct polarization statuses and switch between M1 or M2 activation phenotypes in response to the different external stimuli. However, the role of tumor derived exosomes in the macrophage phenotypic switch and tumor development have not been elucidated in renal cell carcinoma (RCC). Here we found that high macrophage infiltration was associated with worse prognosis in RCC patients, therefore we propose our hypothesis that RCC derived exosomes might directly influence macrophage polarization and thus promote tumor progression. Both cell-based in vitro models and orthotopic transplantation in vivo tumor models were constructed and ELISA, flow cytometry, and macrophage functional studies were performed to investigate whether and how RCC-derived exosomes regulate macrophage polarization and tumor growth. The results found that these exosomes promote macrophage polarization, cytokine release, phagocytosis, angiogenesis, and tumor development. Further study revealed high amount of a recently discovered lncRNA called lncARSR in RCC-derived exosomes. Overexpression of lncARSR induced phenotypic and functional changes of macrophages in vitro and promoted tumor growth in vivo, while knockdown of lncARSR by siRNA disrupted the exosomes-mediated macrophage polarization. LncARSR interacts directly with miR-34/miR- 449 to increase STAT3 expression and mediate macrophage polarization in RCC cells. Together, RCC-derived exosomes facilitate the development of tumor through inducing macrophage polarization via transferring lncARSR, suggesting that RCC-derived exosomes, lncARSR and STAT3 are the potential therapeutic targets for treatment of RCC. © The author(s).Entities:
Keywords: Macrophage polarization; Renal cell carcinoma (RCC); STAT3; Tumor-derived exosomes; lncARSR
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35637970 PMCID: PMC9134902 DOI: 10.7150/ijbs.70289
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Biol Sci ISSN: 1449-2288 Impact factor: 10.750
Figure 3RCC-derived exosomes regulate macrophage polarization Through flow cytometry, we found that compared with macrophages as the control group, the fluorescence intensity of CD163 and CD206 were significantly increased after RCC cell lines (789-O, ACHN and Caki-1) derived exosomes and macrophages co-cultivation (P<0.001) CD163:***P<0.001; CD206: ###P<0.001. C. The supernatants before and after the co-culture were collected, and the Elisa test showed that the expression of cytokines TGFbeta-1 and IL-10 increased, and IL-6, IL-12, IL-1beta decreased significantly after co-culture (p<0.05). D-E. The phagocytic ability of macrophages was significantly enhanced after co-culture with RCC-derived exosomes (p<0.05). F-G. Through tube formation assay we found that the pro-angiogenic ability of macrophages was significantly enhanced after co-cultured with RCC-derived exosomes (p<0.01).