Abstract

Extracellular vesicles (EVs), comprising exosomes, microvesicles, and apoptotic bodies, are released by all cells into the extracellular matrix and body fluids, where they play important roles in intercellular communication and matrix remodeling in various pathological conditions. Malignant pleural mesothelioma (MPM) is a primary tumor of mesothelial origin, predominantly related to asbestos exposure. The detection of MPM at an early stage and distinguishing it from benign conditions and metastatic adenocarcinomas (AD) is sometimes challenging. Pleural effusion is often the first available biological material and an ideal source for characterizing diagnostic and prognostic factors. Specific proteins have previously been identified as diagnostic markers in effusion, but it is not currently known whether these are associated with vesicles or released in soluble form. Here, we study and characterize tumor heterogeneity and extracellular vesicle diversity in pleural effusion as diagnostic or prognostic markers for MPM. We analyzed extracellular vesicles and soluble proteins from 27 pleural effusions, which were collected and processed at the department of pathology and cytology at Karolinska University Hospital, representing three different patient groups, MPM (n = 9), benign (n = 6), and AD (n = 12). The vesicles were fractionated into apoptotic bodies, microvesicles, and exosomes by differential centrifugation and characterized by nanoparticle tracking analysis and Western blotting. Multiplex bead-based flow cytometry analysis showed that exosomal markers were expressed differently on EVs present in different fractions. Further characterization of exosomes by a multiplex immunoassay (Luminex) showed that all soluble proteins studied were also present in exosomes, though the ratio of protein concentration present in supernatant versus exosomes varied. The proportion of Angiopoietin-1 present in exosomes was generally higher in benign compared to malignant samples. The corresponding ratios of Mesothelin, Galectin-1, Osteopontin, and VEGF were higher in MPM effusions compared to those in the benign group. These findings demonstrate that relevant diagnostic markers can be recovered from exosomes.

Highlights

  • To verify that the fractions isolated from pleural effusions contained the relevant hypothesized components, we performed Western blot against proteins known to be enriched in each

  • We demonstrated that the presence of 15 surface proteins (CD9, CD63, CD81, CD2, CD8, CD14, CD29, CD44, CD49e, CD62p, CD105, CD146, CD326, HLA-ABC, and MCSP) were higher, whereas HLA-DRDPDQ and

  • We showed that Galectin-1, Mesothelin, Osteopontin, and VEGF have higher levels in malignant pleural mesothelioma compared with the benign patients and Galectin-1 and Mesothelin have higher levels in malignant pleural mesothelioma compared with the metastatic adenocarcinoma patients [29]

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Summary

Introduction

Malignant pleural mesothelioma (MPM) is an aggressive mesenchymal tumor arising from mesothelial cells of pleura, characterized by the production of hyaluronan and a spectrum of cell surface and matrix proteoglycans, some of which are useful biomarkers facilitating early clinical diagnosis, the monitoring of tumor burden, and effect of therapy. Diagnosis from pleural effusion is challenging but essential to improving patient survival [1,2]. As pleural effusion is the first available clinical material, cytological examination provides the earliest diagnostic evaluation [3,4] by combining cytomorphology, immunocytochemistry, fluorescence in situ hybridization, biomarker analyses, and electron. Biomolecules 2021, 11, 1606 microscopy [3,5,6]. In addition to early diagnosis, distinguishing MPM from metastatic adenocarcinoma (AD) is another challenge in patients with malignant pleural effusion. CEA, HBME1, TTF1, CK7, and Calretinin are the most useful immunohistochemistry markers for AD [3,7]

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