The HSP-Accessorized Exosome: Presence in States of Danger, Disease, and Disruption
Michael Graner, Professor, University of Colorado Anschutz School of Medicine
Heat shock proteins (HSPs) function as chaperones under both normal and
pathologic conditions. As chaperones they assist in protein folding, in
holding protein complexes for current or future activation, and in the
degradation of senescent proteins for recycling of components and
display for immune surveillance. During stressful situations, HSP
quantities and/or activities are increased as cells and tissues seek
protection from insults. On occasion, these insults can result in the
cell surface display of HSPs, which can then lead to the surface display
of HSPs on exosomes, membrane-enclosed vesicles released
extracellularly after passage thru the endosomal system. HSPs present on
the cell surface or in the extracellular space are regarded as “danger
signals” in an ancient biologic paradigm. HSP-accessorized exosomes may
act as “danger boli”, carrying not only the HSPs, but hundreds of
components of the stressed parental cell, capable of prompting immune
responses, or possibly immune suppression, depending on the status of
the recipient cell. Here we show that exosomes from the blood of
patients suffering from neurologic maladies (cancer, brain injury,
multiple sclerosis) are precipitated by peptides designed to bind HSPs.
The metabolome of such exosomes is distinct from that of blood exosomes
from healthy donors. Such HSP-accessorized exosomes possess inflammatory
properties and may serve as biomarkers in a “liquid biopsy” setting.
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