4.5 Article

High-throughput analysis of glycan sorting into extracellular vesicles

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.bbamcr.2023.119641

Keywords

Cargo sorting; Ectosomes; Exosomes; Glycomics; MDA-MB-231; Microvesicles

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This study used a mass spectrometry-based approach to assess the differences in glycan features between extracellular vesicles (EVs) and originating cells. The results showed that EVs selectively enriched specific glycan features, particularly those associated with binding to the extracellular matrix. The study also found differences in EV glycan sorting between different metastatic cell lines and mouse models, indicating a potential role of glycan diversity in the metastatic process.
Extracellular vesicles (EVs) are cell-released vesicles that mediate intercellular communication by transferring bioactive cargo. Protein and RNA sorting into EVs has been extensively assessed, while selective enrichment of glycans in EVs remains less explored. In this study, a mass spectrometry-based approach, glycan node analysis (GNA), was applied to broadly assess the sorting of glycan features into EVs. Two metastatic variants (lung and bone) generated in mouse modes from the MDA-MB-231 human breast cancer cell line were assessed, as these EVs are known to contain distinct organotropic biomolecules. EVs were isolated from conditioned cell culture medium by tangential flow filtration and authenticated by standard techniques. GNA analysis revealed selective enrichment of several glycan features in EVs compared to the originating cells, particularly those associated with binding to the extracellular matrix, which was also observed in EVs from the parental MDA-MB-231 cell line (human pleural metastases). The bone-tropic variant displayed enrichment of distinct EV glycan features compared to the lung-tropic one. Additionally, the metastatic variants generated in mouse models displayed reduced EV glycan sorting compared to the parental metastatic cell line. This study represents the first comprehensive assessment of differences in glycan features between EVs and originating cells and provides evidence that the diversity of EV glycan sorting is reduced upon generation of variant cell lines in mouse models. Future research is likely to uncover novel mechanisms of EV glycan sorting, shed light on glycan features for EV authentication or biomarker purposes, and assess functional roles of the EV glycocode in (patho)physiology.

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