4.7 Article

TPI1-reduced extracellular vesicles mediated by Rab20 downregulation promotes aerobic glycolysis to drive hepatocarcinogenesis

Journal

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

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/jev2.12135

Keywords

extracellular vesicles; glycolysis; hepatocellular carcinoma; Rab20 GTPase; triosephosphate isomerase 1

Categories

Funding

  1. NationalNatural Science Foundation ofChina [82072626]
  2. StateKey Laboratory of LiverResearch (TheUniversity ofHong Kong) [SKLLR/CRSS/2019]
  3. The University of Hong Kong Seed Funding for Strategic Interdisciplinary Research Scheme [102009863, 007000142]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The study revealed that Rab20 is the most frequently downregulated Rab protein in HCC, and restoring Rab20 in metastatic cancer cells results in the release of EVs with reduced activity to promote cell growth, motility, and metastasis. Conversely, EVs released from normal liver cells with Rab20 knockdown lose their suppressive effect on HCC cell growth and motility. Furthermore, the study demonstrated a mechanistic link between tumour cell-derived EVs and glucose metabolism in HCC with Rab20 deregulation through the modulation of glycolytic enzyme TPI1 levels in EVs.
Rab GTPases are major mediators that ensure the proper spatiotemporal regulation of intracellular trafficking. Functional impairment and altered expression of Rab proteins have been revealed in various human cancers. There is an emerging evidence about the role of Rab proteins in the biogenesis of extracellular vesicles (EVs). In hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), using RNA sequencing comparing expression profiles of adjacent non-tumorous tissues and HCC, Rab20 is identified to be the most frequently downregulated Rab member in HCC. Functionally, restoration of Rab20 in metastatic HCC cells results in the release of EVs with a diminished activity to promote cell growth, motility and metastasis. Conversely, EVs released from normal liver cells with Rab20 knockdown loses suppressive effect on HCC cell growth and motility. Proteomic profiling revealed the level of triosephosphate isomerase 1 (TPI1), a glycolytic enzyme, in EVs to be positively associated with Rab20 expression of the releasing cells. TPI1 targeted to be expressed in EVs released by Rab20 knockdown cells compromises the oncogenic activity of EVs. Besides, EVs released by TPI1 knockdown cells recapitulates the promoting effect of EVs derived from HCC cells with Rab20 underexpression. Aerobic glycolysis is beneficial to the survival and proliferation of tumour cells. Here, we observed that the enhanced cell growth and motility are driven by the enhanced aerobic glycolysis induced by EVs with reduced TPI1. The addition of glycolytic inhibitor blocks the promoting effect of EVs with reduced TPI1. Taken together, our study provides a mechanistic link among tumour cell-derived EVs and glucose metabolism in HCC with Rab20 deregulation.

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