4.7 Article

Molecular and functional profiling of apical versus basolateral small extracellular vesicles derived from primary human proximal tubular epithelial cells under inflammatory conditions

Journal

JOURNAL OF EXTRACELLULAR VESICLES
Volume 10, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/jev2.12064

Keywords

apical; basolateral; human proximal tubular epithelial cells; inflammation; small extracellular vesicles

Categories

Funding

  1. Pathology Queensland
  2. Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital Research Grant
  3. Kidney Research Foundation
  4. National Health and Medical Research Council [GNT1099222]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Proximal tubular epithelial cells play a central role in inflammatory kidney diseases, with the secretion of sEV involved in disease progression. The molecular composition of sEV released from the apical versus basolateral membranes under inflammatory conditions differs, suggesting specialized functional roles for each.
Proximal tubular epithelial cells (PTEC) are central players in inflammatory kidney diseases. However, the complex signalling mechanism/s via which polarized PTEC mediate disease progression are poorly understood. Small extracellular vesicles (sEV), including exosomes, are recognized as fundamental components of cellular communication and signalling courtesy of their molecular cargo (lipids, microRNA, proteins). In this study, we examined the molecular content and function of sEV secreted from the apical versus basolateral surfaces of polarized human primary PTEC under inflammatory diseased conditions. PTEC were cultured under normal and inflammatory conditions on Transwell inserts to enable separate collection and isolation of apical/basolateral sEV. Significantly increased numbers of apical and basolateral sEV were secreted under inflammatory conditions compared with equivalent normal conditions. Multi-omits analysis revealed distinct molecular profiles (lipids, microRNA, proteins) between inflammatory and normal conditions for both apical and basolateral sEV. Biological pathway analyses of significantly differentially expressed molecules associated apical inflammatory sEV with processes of cell survival and immunological disease, while basolateral inflammatory sEV were linked to pathways of immune cell trafficking and cell-to-cell signalling. In line with this mechanistic concept, functional assays demonstrated significantly increased production of chemokines (monocyte chemoattractant protein-1, interleukin-8) and immuno-regulatory cytokine interleukin-10 by peripheral blood mononuclear cells ctivated with basolateral sEV derived from inflammatory PTEC. We propose that the distinct molecular composition of sEV released from the apical versus basolateral membranes of human inflammatory PTEC may reflect specialized functional roles, with basolateral-derived sEV pivotal in modulating tubulointerstitial inflammatory responses observed in many immune-mediated kidney diseases. These findings provide a rationale to further evaluate these sEV-mediated inflammatory pathways as targets for biomarker and therapeutic development.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available