4.7 Article

Cdc42 functions as a regulatory node for tumour-derived microvesicle biogenesis

Journal

JOURNAL OF EXTRACELLULAR VESICLES
Volume 10, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/jev2.12051

Keywords

Cdc42; EGF signalling; GTPase; IQGAP; Microvesicle; tumour angiogenesis

Categories

Funding

  1. Ministry of Education Key Laboratory on Signaling Regulation and Targeting Therapy of Liver Cancer
  2. Shanghai Key Laboratory of Hepato-biliary Tumor Biology
  3. Military Key Laboratory on Signal Transduction
  4. National Natural Science foundation of China [NSFC: 81773112, 82073186, NSFC: 81830054, 91859205, 81988101]
  5. Shanghai Education Committee Program [201901070007E00065]

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This study reveals a complex regulation of MV shedding by tumor cells, with activated Cdc42 maintaining sustained EGF signaling and facilitating MV release. Inhibiting these signaling pathways effectively reduces MV shedding and significantly inhibits MV-promoted in vivo tumor angiogenesis, potentially contributing to strategies targeting MVs in cancer therapy.
Tumour-derived microvesicles (MVs) serve as critical mediators of cell-to-cell communication in the tumour microenvironment. So far, the underlying mechanisms of MV biogenesis, especially how key tumorigenesis signals such as abnormal EGF signalling regulates MV release, remain unclear. Here, we set out to establish reliable readouts for MV biogenesis and then explore the molecular mechanisms that regulate MV generation. We found that Rho family small G protein Cdc42 is a convergent node of multiple regulatory signals that occur in MV biogenesis. The binding of activated GTP-bound Cdc42 and its downstream effector, Ras GTPase-activating-like protein 1 (IQGAP1), is required for MV shedding. Activated Cdc42 maintains sustained EGF signalling by inhibiting the internalization of cell surface receptors, including EGFR and the VEGF oligomer, VEGF(90K), and then facilitates MV release. Subsequently, we further demonstrated that blocking these signalling pathways using the corresponding mutants effectively reduced MV shedding and significantly inhibited MV-promoted in vivo tumour angiogenesis. These findings reveal a complex regulation of MV shedding by tumour cells, shedding light on the regulatory mechanism of MV biogenesis, and potentially contributing to strategies that target MVs in cancer therapy.

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