Lazar Sophia, Goldfinger Lawrence E
The Sol Sherry Thrombosis Research Center, Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology, Lewis Katz School of Medicine, Temple University, Philadelphia, PA, United States.
Cancer Biology Program, Fox Chase Cancer Center, Philadelphia, PA, United States.
Front Cardiovasc Med. 2018 Feb 28;5:13. doi: 10.3389/fcvm.2018.00013. eCollection 2018.
Platelet-derived microparticles (PMPs) have long been known to increase in circulation in the presence of cancer, and have been considered to be cancer promoting by multiple mechanisms including shrouding of circulating tumor cells allowing immune evasion, inducing a procoagulant state associated with increased risk for venous thromboembolic events in cancer patients, and supporting metastatic dissemination by establishment of niches for anchorage of circulating tumor cells. These modes of PMP-enhanced progression of late stage cancer are generally based on the adhesive and procoagulant surfaces of PMPs. However, it is now clear that PMPs can also act as intercellular signaling vesicles, by fusion with target cells and transfer of a broad array of platelet-derived molecular contents including growth factors, angiogenic modulators, second messengers, lipids, and nucleic acids. It is also now well established that PMPs are major repositories of microRNAs (miRNAs). In recent years, new roles of PMPs in cancer have begun emerging, primarily reflecting their ability to transfer miRNA contents and modulate gene expression in target cells, allowing PMPs to affect cancer development at many stages. PMPs have been shown to interact with and transfer miRNAs to various blood vascular cells including endothelium, macrophages and neutrophils. As each of these contributes to cancer progression, PMP-mediated miRNA transfer can affect immune response, NETosis, tumor angiogenesis, and likely other cancer-associated processes. Recently, PMP miRNA transfer was found to suppress primary tumor growth, via PMP infiltration in solid tumors, anchorage to tumor cells and direct miRNA transfer, resulting in tumor cell gene suppression and inhibition of tumor growth. This mini-review will summarize current knowledge of PMP-miRNA interactions with cancer-associated cells and effects in cancer progression, and will indicate new research directions for understanding platelet-cancer interactions.
长期以来,人们一直知道血小板衍生微粒(PMPs)在癌症存在的情况下会在循环中增加,并被认为通过多种机制促进癌症,包括包裹循环肿瘤细胞以实现免疫逃逸、诱导促凝状态从而增加癌症患者发生静脉血栓栓塞事件的风险,以及通过为循环肿瘤细胞建立锚定微环境来支持转移扩散。PMPs促进晚期癌症进展的这些模式通常基于其黏附性和促凝表面。然而,现在很清楚的是,PMPs还可以作为细胞间信号传递囊泡,通过与靶细胞融合并转移包括生长因子、血管生成调节剂、第二信使、脂质和核酸在内的多种血小板衍生分子成分来发挥作用。现在也已充分证实,PMPs是微小RNA(miRNAs)的主要储存库。近年来,PMPs在癌症中的新作用开始显现,主要反映在它们转移miRNA成分并调节靶细胞基因表达的能力上,使PMPs能够在多个阶段影响癌症发展。已证明PMPs可与包括内皮细胞、巨噬细胞和中性粒细胞在内的各种血管细胞相互作用并向其转移miRNAs。由于这些细胞都对癌症进展有贡献,PMP介导的miRNA转移可影响免疫反应、中性粒细胞胞外诱捕作用、肿瘤血管生成以及可能的其他癌症相关过程。最近发现,PMP miRNA转移可通过PMP渗入实体瘤、锚定到肿瘤细胞并直接进行miRNA转移来抑制原发性肿瘤生长,从而导致肿瘤细胞基因抑制和肿瘤生长受抑制。本综述将总结当前关于PMP - miRNA与癌症相关细胞相互作用及其在癌症进展中作用的知识,并指出理解血小板 - 癌症相互作用的新研究方向。