4.7 Article

Glioblastoma Extracellular Vesicle-Specific Peptides Inhibit EV-Induced Neuronal Cytotoxicity

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms23137200

Keywords

glioblastoma; meningioma; plasma; tumor cell line; extracellular vesicles; ELISA; phage-display; peptides; neurons; cytotoxicity

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [NIMH1R21MH118174-01, 4R33MH118174]
  2. Department of Neurosurgery Tissue Bank Fund

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WHO Grade 4 IDH-wild type astrocytoma (GBM) is a deadly brain tumor with poor prognosis, while meningioma (MMA) is a common benign tumor. This study identified specific peptides using phage display technology to isolate and characterize extracellular vesicles (EVs) in brain tumors, which may have important implications for the treatment of brain tumors.
WHO Grade 4 IDH-wild type astrocytoma (GBM) is the deadliest brain tumor with a poor prognosis. Meningioma (MMA) is a more common benign central nervous system tumor but with significant recurrence rates. There is an urgent need for brain tumor biomarkers for early diagnosis and effective treatment options. Extracellular vesicles (EVs) are tiny membrane-enclosed vesicles that play essential functions in cell-to-cell communications among tumor cells. We aimed to identify epitopes of brain tumor EVs by phage peptide libraries. EVs from GBM plasma, MMA plasma, or brain tumor cell lines were used to screen phage-displayed random peptide libraries to identify high-affinity peptides. We purified EVs from three GBM plasma pools (23 patients), one MMA pool (10 patients), and four brain tumor cell lines. We identified a total of 21 high-affinity phage peptides (12 unique) specific to brain tumor EVs. The peptides shared high sequence homologies among those selected by the same EVs. Dose-response ELISA demonstrated that phage peptides were specific to brain tumor EVs compared to controls. Peptide affinity purification identified unique brain tumor EV subpopulations. Significantly, GBM EV peptides inhibit brain tumor EV-induced complement-dependent cytotoxicity (necrosis) in neurons. We conclude that phage display technology could identify specific peptides to isolate and characterize tumor EVs.

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