4.7 Article

Oncogenic H-Ras Reprograms Madin-Darby Canine Kidney (MDCK) Cell-derived Exosomal Proteins Following Epithelial-Mesenchymal Transition

Journal

MOLECULAR & CELLULAR PROTEOMICS
Volume 12, Issue 8, Pages 2148-2159

Publisher

AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1074/mcp.M112.027086

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Health & Medical Research Council (NHMRC) of Australia [487922, 280913, 433619, 628946, 400202]
  2. Australian Research Council [FT100100560]
  3. Early Career CJ Martin Fellowship [APP1037043]
  4. NHMRC Dora Lush Biomedical Postgraduate Scholarship [628959]
  5. The University of Melbourne Research Scholarship
  6. Australian Proteomics Computational Facility
  7. National Health & Medical Research Council of Australia [381413]
  8. American Recovery and Reinvestment Act funds through National Institutes of Health [R01 HG005805]
  9. NIGMS Grant from Center for Systems Biology [2P50 GM076547]
  10. Luxembourg Centre for Systems Biomedicine
  11. University of Luxembourg
  12. National Science Foundation (MRI Grant) [0923536]
  13. German Academic Exchange Service
  14. NCI of the NIH [1R03CA156667]
  15. Direct For Biological Sciences
  16. Div Of Biological Infrastructure [923536] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) is a highly conserved morphogenic process defined by the loss of epithelial characteristics and the acquisition of a mesenchymal phenotype. EMT is associated with increased aggressiveness, invasiveness, and metastatic potential in carcinoma cells. To assess the contribution of extracellular vesicles following EMT, we conducted a proteomic analysis of exosomes released from Madin-Darby canine kidney (MDCK) cells, and MDCK cells transformed with oncogenic H-Ras (21D1 cells). Exosomes are 40-100 nm membranous vesicles originating from the inward budding of late endosomes and multivesicular bodies and are released from cells on fusion of multivesicular bodies with the plasma membrane. Exosomes from MDCK cells (MDCK-Exos) and 21D1 cells (21D1-Exos) were purified from cell culture media using density gradient centrifugation (OptiPrep), and protein content identified by GeLC-MS/MS proteomic profiling. Both MDCK- and 21D1-Exos populations were morphologically similar by cryo-electron microscopy and contained stereotypical exosome marker proteins such as TSG101, Alix, and CD63. In this study we show that the expression levels of typical EMT hallmark proteins seen in whole cells correlate with those observed in MDCK- and 21D1-Exos, i.e. reduction of characteristic inhibitor of angiogenesis, thrombospondin-1, and epithelial markers E-cadherin, and EpCAM, with a concomitant up-regulation of mesenchymal makers such as vimentin. Further, we reveal that 21D1-Exos are enriched with several proteases (e.g. MMP-1, -14, -19, ADAM-10, and ADAMTS1), and integrins (e.g. ITGB1, ITGA3, and ITGA6) that have been recently implicated in regulating the tumor microenvironment to promote metastatic progression. A salient finding of this study was the unique presence of key transcriptional regulators (e.g. the master transcriptional regulator YBX1) and core splicing complex components (e.g. SF3B1, SF3B3, and SFRS1) in mesenchymal 21D1-Exos. Taken together, our findings reveal that exosomes from Ras-transformed MDCK cells are reprogrammed with factors which may be capable of inducing EMT in recipient cells.

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