Project 2 - Intercellular communication in prostate cancer

NIH RePORTER · NIH · P01 · $284,479 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

Project 2 is based on preliminary data demonstrating that prostate cancer-derived exocytosed microvesicles of endosomal origin, exosomes (EX), containing αv integrins provide a paracrine mechanism of regulation of prostate cancer cell motility. During the current funding cycle, we have investigated whether the αvß6 and αvß3 integrins known to be highly up-regulated in cancer and metastasis, are transferred among different subsets of prostate cancer cells through EX and have the ability to functional aberrations in the recipient cells. We have recently described that these αv integrins are present in EX of several prostate cancer cells, are transferred from donor to recipient cells and are localized to the cell surface indicating they are functional. The quality of our EX preparations, obtained by differential ultracentrifugation, was tested by electron microscopyJ continuous sucrose gradient, and biochemical characterization using CD63, CD81 and Flotillin-1, as markers known to be enriched in EXJ furthermore, EX internalization was determined by confocal microscopy. The active state of αv integrins is confirmed in cell migration assays which show that the αvß6 integrin, transferred through EX, promotes cell migration of recipient cells mediated by specific ligands. Furthermore, we show that focal adhesion kinase and src, known downstream effectors of integrins in cell motility, are localized in EX as active phosphorylated forms indicating that these microvesicles may transfer entire signaling compartments to a recipient cell. To evaluate the relevance of our findings, we purified EX from sera of TRAMP mice, which had developed prostate cancer and show that the αvß3 integrin is expressed in these EX. Furthermore, in collaboration with Core B, we show a proteomics analysis of EX (i) and modulation of EX content in response to downregulation of αvß6 (ii). These results show a unique EX protein signature compared with cell lysates and uncover an increase in GRP94 levels in EX upon downregulation of αvß6. In summary, this study shows that αv integrins are transferred among different subsets of prostate cancer cells through EX, promote cell migration through interaction with specific ligands, and are found in EX purified from serum. Based on these data, three specific aims will investigate the role of the αv integrins delivered by EX in intercellular communications with respect to phenotypic changes occurring upon uptake of EX by either cancer cells or myeloid-derived suppressor recipient cells (Aim 1), characterize the role of integrins, their downstream effectors and associated transmembrane proteins transferred through EX in cancer cell bioenergetics, modulation of the cellular stress response, and activation of cell motility kinases (Aim 2), and test the composition of EX and role of EX-mediated prostate cancer progression using SCID mice as well as castrated, prostate-specific Pten conditional knockout mice (Aim 3). Overall this study will bring n...

Key facts

NIH application ID
9984979
Project number
5P01CA140043-11
Recipient
WISTAR INSTITUTE
Principal Investigator
Lucia R. Languino
Activity code
P01
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2020
Award amount
$284,479
Award type
5
Project period
2010-07-09 → 2022-07-31