La Trobe

Oncogenic epithelial cell-derived exosomes containing Rac1 and PAK2 induce angiogenesis in recipient endothelial cells

Download (6.16 MB)
journal contribution
posted on 2021-08-05, 05:44 authored by SK Gopal, David GreeningDavid Greening, EG Hanssen, H-J Zhu, Richard SimpsonRichard Simpson, RA Mathias
The metastatic cascade describes the escape of primary tumour cells to distant secondary sites. Cells at the leading tumour edge are thought to undergo epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT), to enhance their motility and invasion for spreading. Whether EMT cells directly promote tumour angiogenesis, and the role of exosomes (30-150 nm extracellular vesicles) remains largely unknown. We examined the functional effects of exosomes from MDCK cells, MDCK cells stably expressing YBX1 (MDCKYBX1, intermediate EMT), and Ras-transformed MDCK cells (21D1 cells, complete EMT). 2F-2B cell motility and tube formation (length and branching) was significantly increased following supplementation with MDCKYBX1 or 21D1 exosomes, but not MDCK exosomes. Next, Matrigel™ plugs containing exosome-supplemented 2F-2B cells were subcutaneously injected into mice. Systemic perfusion was only observed for plugs supplemented with MDCKYBX1 or 21D1 exosomes. Comparative proteomics revealed that 21D1 exosomes contained VEGF-associated proteins, while MDCKYBX1 exosomes were enriched with activated Rac1 and PAK2. To validate, 2F-2B cells and HUVECs were pre-treated with PAK inhibitors prior to exosome supplementation. PAK inhibition nullified the effects of MDCKYBX1 exosomes by reducing the tube length and branching to baseline levels. By contrast, the effects of 21D1 exosomes were not significantly decreased. Our results demonstrate for the first time that oncogenic cells undergoing EMT can communicate with endothelial cells via exosomes, and establish exosomal Rac1/PAK2 as angiogenic promoters that may function from early stages of the metastatic cascade.

Funding

Authors are supported, in part, by the National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia program grants APP487922 (RJS), project grant APP433619 (H-JZ), and Early Career CJ Martin Fellowship APP1037043 (RAM). H-JZ is also supported by the Melbourne Research Grant Support Scheme (The University of Melbourne). SKG is supported by a La Trobe University Postgraduate Scholarship.

History

Publication Date

2016-02-22

Journal

Oncotarget

Volume

7

Issue

15

Pagination

14p. (p. 19709-19722)

Publisher

Impact Journals

ISSN

1949-2553

Rights Statement

© 2016 Impact Journals, LLC Licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Usage metrics

    Journal Articles

    Licence

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC