University of Alabama at Birmingham, Department of Pathology, Birmingham, 35294, USA.
University of Alabama at Birmingham, Department of Surgery, Birmingham, 35294, USA.
Matrix Biol. 2018 Jan;65:104-118. doi: 10.1016/j.matbio.2017.09.001. Epub 2017 Sep 6.
The heparan sulfate-degrading enzyme heparanase promotes the progression of many cancers by driving tumor cell proliferation, metastasis and angiogenesis. Heparanase accomplishes this via multiple mechanisms including its recently described effect on enhancing biogenesis of tumor exosomes. Because we recently discovered that heparanase expression is upregulated in myeloma cells that survive chemotherapy, we were prompted to investigate the impact of anti-myeloma drugs on exosome biogenesis. When myeloma cells were exposed to the commonly utilized anti-myeloma drugs bortezomib, carfilzomib or melphalan, exosome secretion by the cells was dramatically enhanced. These chemotherapy-induced exosomes (chemoexosomes) have a proteome profile distinct from cells not exposed to drug including a dramatic elevation in the level of heparanase present as exosome cargo. The chemoexosome heparanase was not found inside the chemoexosome, but was present on the exosome surface where it was capable of degrading heparan sulfate embedded within an extracellular matrix. When exposed to myeloma cells, chemoexosomes transferred their heparanase cargo to those cells, enhancing their heparan sulfate degrading activity and leading to activation of ERK signaling and an increase in shedding of the syndecan-1 proteoglycan. Exposure of chemoexosomes to macrophages enhanced their secretion of TNF-α, an important myeloma growth factor. Moreover, chemoexosomes stimulated macrophage migration and this effect was blocked by H1023, a monoclonal antibody that inhibits heparanase enzymatic activity. These data suggest that anti-myeloma therapy ignites a burst of exosomes having a high level of heparanase that remodels extracellular matrix and alters tumor and host cell behaviors that likely contribute to chemoresistance and eventual patient relapse.
We find that anti-myeloma chemotherapy dramatically stimulates secretion of exosomes and alters exosome composition. Exosomes secreted during therapy contain high levels of heparanase on their surface that can degrade ECM and also can be transferred to both tumor and host cells, altering their behavior in ways that may enhance tumor survival and progression.
硫酸乙酰肝素降解酶乙酰肝素酶通过促进肿瘤细胞增殖、转移和血管生成来促进许多癌症的进展。乙酰肝素酶通过多种机制实现这一目标,包括其最近描述的增强肿瘤外泌体生物发生的作用。由于我们最近发现,在对化疗有耐药性的骨髓瘤细胞中,乙酰肝素酶的表达上调,因此我们着手研究抗骨髓瘤药物对外泌体生物发生的影响。当骨髓瘤细胞暴露于常用的抗骨髓瘤药物硼替佐米、卡非佐米或美法仑时,细胞分泌的外泌体显著增加。这些化疗诱导的外泌体(化疗外泌体)与未暴露于药物的细胞的蛋白质组谱不同,其中外泌体货物中乙酰肝素酶的水平显著升高。化疗外泌体中的乙酰肝素酶未在化疗外泌体内部发现,而是存在于外泌体表面,在那里它能够降解嵌入细胞外基质的硫酸乙酰肝素。当暴露于骨髓瘤细胞时,化疗外泌体将其乙酰肝素酶货物转移到这些细胞中,增强了它们的硫酸乙酰肝素降解活性,并导致 ERK 信号的激活和连接蛋白-1 蛋白聚糖的脱落增加。将化疗外泌体暴露于巨噬细胞中会增强其肿瘤坏死因子-α(一种重要的骨髓瘤生长因子)的分泌。此外,化疗外泌体刺激巨噬细胞迁移,这种效应被 H1023 阻断,H1023 是一种抑制乙酰肝素酶酶活性的单克隆抗体。这些数据表明,抗骨髓瘤治疗引发了一波高水平乙酰肝素酶的外泌体释放,重塑细胞外基质,并改变肿瘤和宿主细胞的行为,这可能有助于化疗耐药和最终患者复发。
我们发现,抗骨髓瘤化疗显著刺激外泌体的分泌并改变外泌体的组成。治疗过程中分泌的外泌体表面含有高水平的乙酰肝素酶,可降解 ECM,也可转移到肿瘤细胞和宿主细胞,改变其行为,从而增强肿瘤的存活和进展。