4.7 Article

Proteomic Landscape of Exosomes Reveals the Functional Contributions of CD151 in Triple-Negative Breast Cancer

Journal

MOLECULAR & CELLULAR PROTEOMICS
Volume 20, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.mcpro.2021.100121

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31670832]
  2. National Key Research and Development Program of China [2016YFA0500301]
  3. State Key Laboratory of Protein and Plant Gene Research, College of Life Science, Peking University

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This study revealed the proteomic landscape of TNBC-derived exosomes and discovered that CD151 levels in TNBC-derived exosomes were significantly higher than those in exosomes from healthy subjects. CD151 may be a potential therapeutic target for TNBC.
Triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) is an aggressive subtype of breast cancer. Patients with TNBC have poor overall survival because of limited molecular therapeutic targets. Recently, exosomes have been recognized as key mediators in cancer progression, but the molecular components and function of TNBC-derived exosomes remain unknown. The main goal of this study was to reveal the proteomic landscape of serum exosomes derived from ten patients with TNBC and 17 healthy donors to identify potential therapeutic targets. Using a tandem mass tag-based quantitative proteomics approach, we characterized the proteomes of individual patient-derived serum exosomes, identified exosomal protein signatures specific to patients with TNBC, and filtered out differentially expressed proteins. Most importantly, we found that the tetraspanin CD151 expression levels in TNBC-derived serum exosomes were significantly higher than those exosomes from healthy subjects, and we validated our findings with samples from 16 additional donors. Furthermore, utilizing quantitative proteomics approach to reveal the proteomes of CD151-deleted exosomes and cells, we found that exosomal CD151 facilitated secretion of ribosomal proteins via exosomes while inhibiting exosome secretion of complement proteins. Moreover, we proved that CD151-deleted exosomes significantly decreased the migration and invasion of TNBC cells. This is the first comparative study of the proteomes of TNBC patient-derived and CD151-deleted exosomes. Our findings indicate that profiling of TNBC-derived exosomal proteins is a useful tool to extend our understanding of TNBC, and exosomal CD151 may be a potential therapeutic target for TNBC.

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