Extracellular Vesicles From Prostate Cancer Cells Promote Angiogenesis Through alphavß6 Integrin
Shiv Ram Krishn, Post-doctoral Fellow, Thomas Jefferson University
Increased angiogenesis in prostate tumors has been shown to be promoted
by cancer cells, but the underlying mechanisms are not completely
understood. Prostate cancer (PrCa) cells continuously release
extracellular vesicles (EV) of endosomal origin, to mediate unique
crosstalk with other cells in the tumor microenvironment by direct
transfer of vesicular cargo. Our group has shown expression of
alphav-beta6 integrin (alphavß6), which is an epithelial-specific
integrin, in human PrCa cell-derived EV. We hypothesized that
extracellular vesicles-associated alphavß6 (EV-alphavß6) shed by PrCa
cells may impact the endothelial cells in the prostate tumor
microenvironment and thus angiogenesis. Here in, we demonstrate that
EV-alphavß6 is efficiently transferred to alphavß6-negative recipient
human microvascular endothelial cells (HMEC1). We also demonstrate the
intracellular localization of ß6-GFP transferred via PrCa cell-derived
EVs. De novo alphavß6 expression in HMEC1 is not a result of a change
in mRNA levels but is a consequence of EV-mediated transfer of alphavß6
from PrCa cells to HMEC1. Incubation of HMEC1 with purified EV from PC3
cells, transfected with shRNA to ß6, results in a significant reduction
in viability and motility of HMEC1. Our results also demonstrate that
EV-alphavß6 significantly augments tube formation of HMEC1. At the
molecular level, our results demonstrate that transfer of PrCa
cell-derived EV-alphavß6 to HMEC1 causes down-regulation of STAT1, a
molecule known to negatively regulate angiogenesis. Overall, our study
suggests that EV-mediated transfer of alphavß6 from PrCa cells to
endothelial cells may regulate angiogenesis during PrCa progression.
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