Exosomes as “translational” cancer promoter organelles
Editorial

Exosomes as “translational” cancer promoter organelles

Isabella Panfoli

University of Genova, School of Medical and Pharmaceutical Sciences, DIFAR-Biochemistry Lab., Viale Benedetto XV, 316132 Genova, Italy

Correspondence to: Isabella Panfoli, MD. University of Genova, DIFAR-Biochemistry Lab., Vale Benedetto XV, 316132 Genova, Italy. Email: Isabella.Panfoli@unige.it.

Comment on: Franzen CA, Blackwell RH, Foreman KE, et al. Urinary Exosomes: The Potential for Biomarker Utility, Intercellular Signaling and Therapeutics in Urological Malignancy. J Urol 2016;195:1331-9.



Submitted Jun 18, 2016. Accepted for publication Jun 29, 2016.

doi: 10.21037/tcr.2016.08.08


The term Exosome has come into use to define nano-vesicles contained in multivesicular endosomes (MVE), secreted by fusion of MVE with the plasma membrane (1-3). Exosomes are secreted in vivo by almost any cell type and can be isolated from body fluids (4-6). Indeed, circulating vesicles account for both exosomes and microvesicles (MVs), which can be purified by various purification methods and fully discriminated according to their shape, size and CD-markers (7,8). Due to their protein and RNA content, once internalized, exosomes have the potential to act as “translational” organelles, altering the expression pattern of recipient cells, their growth, and fate. In fact, exosomes are involved in many of physio-pathological processes, thereby including cancer (9).

The work recently published by Franzen et al. in The Journal of Urology (10) examined the role of exosomes in intercellular communication and their potential as noninvasive cancer biomarker source to assess disease and its progression, or vehicles for therapeutic delivery in urologic cancer (11). The need for a predictor of malignancy is universally recognized. This is particularly true in the case of early tumors. There is evidence that cancer-derived exosomes contribute to tumor progression and metastasis (12). Tumor cells produce exosomes, emerging as a potential for the early detection or therapy of human cancer (13).

Human urinary exosomal proteome has been extensively studied (7). Urinary exosomes come from every cell type of the urinary tract, kidney and prostate (14-16). There is increasing interest in urinary exosomes, due to their ability to carry information specific of the tissue of origin. I am positive about the idea that exosomes, which can be easily isolated from human urine by minimally invasive techniques, can allow to detect biomarkers in patients with urogenital cancer, with a wealth of applications in therapy and diagnosis, as we have already observed (17). Bladder cancer is one example, as it represents a serious health problem, (about 8% of all human malignancies), still burdened by a high percentage of relapse (18).

However, I am sceptic to the idea that exosomes can be used in therapeutics as RNA or therapy delivery vector to target cancer cells. Surely, RNA would be protected by the membrane from degradation. Nevertheless, it seems that we still know too little about the surface proteins of exosomes. We have shown that among the exosomal surface proteins there are the respiratory chains and F1Fo-ATP synthase, conducting an oxidative phosphorylation (19,20). Before seeing the contents of a package, its envelope must be opened. Similarly, before the RNA content of an exosome complex is shed, and it can affect the cell expression pattern, its surface proteins will have interacted with the cytosol. We have reported the proteome analysis of urinary exosomes, studied by Orbitrap mass spectrometry, compared to urinoma (20). Cytoscape software analysis of the data elucidated the enriched presence in urinary exosomes of proteins clustered to aerobic metabolism. Moreover, functional experiments showed that urinary exosomes carry out oxidative phosphorylation. The same applies to exosomes derived from human umbilical cord mesenchymal cells (MSC), which are able to conduct an aerobic metabolism (19). Such emerging metabolic function for both human MSC and urinary exosomes should not be ignored. It appears consistent with the report that exosomes can transfer the aerobic metabolism capacity to profoundly hypo-metabolic cells in less than one hour (21). This dramatic effect overturned the fate of doomed cells long before any transcriptional event can have occurred. In case of tumor cells, this may not be desirable. For example it was found that various concentrations of exosomes purified from the supernatants of human bladder cancer T24 cell cultures induce the proliferation and decrease the rates of apoptosis (22). Having the observations been limited to late events, posing ATP availability as a prerequisite (viability assay of at 72 hr, Annexin V and transcription factors activity), an involvement of early metabolic effect cannot be excluded. In fact, it was also found that bladder cancer exosomes can cause urothelial cells to undergo epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT). Authors treated primary urothelial cells with the exosomes isolated mRNA and evaluated the expression of several mesenchymal genes necessarily after a 4- and 6-h time to reveal newly transcribed mRNAs (23). While it is known that the EMT induces invasive properties in epithelial tumors, very little is known about EMT-induced metabolic changes. A study on HER2-positive BT-474 breast cancer cells showed enhanced aerobic metabolism, along with the overexpression of specific glucose transporters (24).

A method to be used clinically should be simple, cost-effective and minimally invasive, which exosome collection from urine appears to be. In conclusion, I am optimistic that further studies about the potential for exosomes will help in diagnosis, treatment and prognosis assessment of urinary tract cancer. However, several unanswered questions regarding the metabolic potential of exosomes remain. In this context, improved knowledge about the metabolism of exosomes are needed.


Acknowledgments

Funding: None.


Footnote

Provenance and Peer Review: This article was commissioned and reviewed by the Section Editor Peng Zhang (Department of Urology, Union Hospital, Tongji Medical College, Huazhong University of Science and Technology, Wuhan, China).

Conflicts of Interest: The author has completed the ICMJE uniform disclosure form (available at http://dx.doi.org/10.21037/tcr.2016.08.08). The author has no conflicts of interest to declare.

Ethical Statement: The author is accountable for all aspects of the work in ensuring that questions related to the accuracy or integrity of any part of the work are appropriately investigated and resolved.

Open Access Statement: This is an Open Access article distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0), which permits the non-commercial replication and distribution of the article with the strict proviso that no changes or edits are made and the original work is properly cited (including links to both the formal publication through the relevant DOI and the license). See: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/.


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Cite this article as: Panfoli I. Exosomes as “translational” cancer promoter organelles. Transl Cancer Res 2016;5(Suppl 2):S205-S207. doi: 10.21037/tcr.2016.08.08

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