Microenvironmental hypoxia induces dynamic changes in lung cancer synthesis and secretion of extracellular vesicles

Shun Wilford Tse, Chee Fan Tan, Jung Eun Park, Jebamercy Gnanasekaran, Nikhil Gupta, Jee Keem Low, Kheng Wei Yeoh, Wee Joo Chng, Chor Yong Tay, Neil E. McCarthy, Sai Kiang Lim, Siu Kwan Sze*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

17 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Extracellular vesicles (EVs) mediate critical intercellular communication within healthy tissues, but are also exploited by tumour cells to promote angiogenesis, metastasis, and host immunosuppression under hypoxic stress. We hypothesize that hypoxic tumours synthesize hypoxia-sensitive proteins for packing into EVs to modulate their microenvironment for cancer progression. In the current report, we employed a heavy isotope pulse/trace quantitative proteomic approach to study hypoxia sensitive proteins in tumour-derived EVs protein. The results revealed that hypoxia stimulated cells to synthesize EVs proteins involved in enhancing tumour cell proliferation (NRSN2, WISP2, SPRX1, LCK), metastasis (GOLM1, STC1, MGAT5B), stemness (STC1, TMEM59), angiogenesis (ANGPTL4), and suppressing host immunity (CD70). In addition, functional clustering analyses revealed that tumour hypoxia was strongly associated with rapid synthesis and EV loading of lysosome-related hydrolases and membrane-trafficking proteins to enhance EVs secretion. Moreover, lung cancer-derived EVs were also enriched in signalling molecules capable of inducing epithelial-mesenchymal transition in recipient cancer cells to promote their migration and invasion. Together, these data indicate that lung-cancer-derived EVs can act as paracrine/autocrine mediators of tumorigenesis and metastasis in hypoxic microenvironments. Tumour EVs may, therefore, offer novel opportunities for useful biomarkers discovery and therapeutic targeting of different cancer types and at different stages according to microenvironmental conditions.

Original languageEnglish
Article number2917
Pages (from-to)1-25
Number of pages25
JournalCancers
Volume12
Issue number10
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Oct 2 2020
Externally publishedYes

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.

ASJC Scopus Subject Areas

  • Oncology
  • Cancer Research

Keywords

  • Epithelial–mesenchymal transition
  • Extracellular vesicles
  • Hypoxia
  • Pulsed-SILAC
  • Quantitative proteomics
  • Tumorigenesis
  • Tumour microenvironment

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