Exosomal microRNAs derived from colorectal cancer-associated fibroblasts: role in driving cancer progression

Rahul Bhome(Southampton General Hospital), Rebecca W. Goh(Southampton General Hospital), Marc D. Bullock(Southampton General Hospital), Nir Pillar(Tel Aviv University), Stephen M. Thirdborough(Southampton General Hospital), Massimiliano Mellone(Southampton General Hospital), Reza Mirnezami(Imperial College London), Dieter Galea(Imperial College London), Kirill Veselkov(Imperial College London), Quan Gu(MRC University of Glasgow Centre for Virus Research), Tim Underwood(Southampton General Hospital), John N. Primrose(Southampton General Hospital), Olivier De Wever(Ghent University), Noam Shomron(Tel Aviv University), Emre Sayan(Southampton General Hospital), Alex H. Mirnezami(Southampton General Hospital)
Aging
December 24, 2017
Cited by 159Open Access
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Abstract

, we demonstrated that fibroblast exosomes are transferred to colorectal cancer cells, with a resultant increase in cellular microRNA levels, impacting proliferation and chemoresistance. To probe this further, exosomal microRNAs were profiled from paired patient-derived normal and cancer-associated fibroblasts, from an ongoing prospective biomarker study. An exosomal cancer-associated fibroblast signature consisting of microRNAs 329, 181a, 199b, 382, 215 and 21 was identified. Of these, miR-21 had highest abundance and was enriched in exosomes. Orthotopic xenografts established with miR-21-overexpressing fibroblasts and CRC cells led to increased liver metastases compared to those established with control fibroblasts. Our data provide a novel stromal exosome signature in colorectal cancer, which has potential for biomarker validation. Furthermore, we confirmed the importance of stromal miR-21 in colorectal cancer progression using an orthotopic model, and propose that exosomes are a vehicle for miR-21 transfer between stromal fibroblasts and cancer cells.


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