4.7 Article

Plant Extracellular Vesicles and Nanovesicles: Focus on Secondary Metabolites, Proteins and Lipids with Perspectives on Their Potential and Sources

期刊

出版社

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms22073719

关键词

extracellular vesicles; plant nanovesicles; exosome-like nanoparticles; in vitro plant cell culture; lipids; metabolomics; proteomics

资金

  1. Fonds National de la Recherche, Luxembourg [SMARTWALL C15/SR/10240550]
  2. Freie Universitat Berlin

向作者/读者索取更多资源

While human EVs have been extensively studied, plant-derived EVs have received less attention. This study introduces plant cell suspension culture as a new source for plant EVs and nanovesicles, revealing properties and mechanisms similar to animal cell-derived exosomes and microvesicles. Proteins present in plant EVs indicate potential mechanisms for cell wall passage and suggest similarities in EV secretion mechanisms between plant and animal cells.
While human extracellular vesicles (EVs) have attracted a big deal of interest and have been extensively characterized over the last years, plant-derived EVs and nanovesicles have earned less attention and have remained poorly investigated. Although a series of investigations already revealed promising beneficial health effects and drug delivery properties, adequate (pre)clinical studies are rare. This fact might be caused by a lack of sources with appropriate qualities. Our study introduces plant cell suspension culture as a new and well controllable source for plant EVs. Plant cells, cultured in vitro, release EVs into the growth medium which could be harvested for pharmaceutical applications. In this investigation we characterized EVs and nanovesicles from distinct sources. Our findings regarding secondary metabolites indicate that these might not be packaged into EVs in an active manner but enriched in the membrane when lipophilic enough, since apparently lipophilic compounds were associated with nanovesicles while more hydrophilic structures were not consistently found. In addition, protein identification revealed a possible explanation for the mechanism of EV cell wall passage in plants, since cell wall hydrolases like 1,3-beta-glucosidases, pectinesterases, polygalacturonases, beta-galactosidases and beta-xylosidase/alpha-L-arabinofuranosidase 2-like are present in plant EVs and nanovesicles which might facilitate cell wall transition. Further on, the identified proteins indicate that plant cells secrete EVs using similar mechanisms as animal cells to release exosomes and microvesicles.

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