Abstract

Ewing sarcoma (EwS) is a highly aggressive cancer and the second most common malignant bone tumor of children and young adults. Although patients with localized disease have a survival rate of approximately 75%, the prognosis for patients with metastatic disease remains dismal (<30%) and has not improved in decades. Standard-of-care treatments include local therapies such as surgery and radiotherapy, in addition to poly-agent adjuvant chemotherapy, and are often associated with long-term disability and reduced quality of life. Novel targeted therapeutic strategies that are more efficacious and less toxic are therefore desperately needed, particularly for metastatic disease, given that the presence of metastasis remains the most powerful predictor of poor outcome in EwS. Intercellular communication within the tumor microenvironment is emerging as a crucial mechanism for cancer cells to establish immunosuppressive and cancer-permissive environments, potentially leading to metastasis. Altering this communication within the tumor microenvironment, thereby preventing the transfer of oncogenic signals and molecules, represents a highly promising therapeutic strategy. To achieve this, extracellular vesicles (EVs) offer a candidate mechanism as they are actively released by tumor cells and enriched with proteins and RNAs. EVs are membrane-bound particles released by normal and tumor cells, that play pivotal roles in intercellular communication, including cross-talk between tumor, stromal fibroblast, and immune cells in the local tumor microenvironment and systemic circulation. EwS EVs, including the smaller exosomes and larger microvesicles, have the potential to reprogram a diversity of cells in the tumor microenvironment, by transferring various biomolecules in a cell-specific manner. Insights into the various biomolecules packed in EwS EVs as cargos and the molecular changes they trigger in recipient cells of the tumor microenvironment will shed light on various potential targets for therapeutic intervention in EwS. This review details EwS EVs composition, their potential role in metastasis and in the reprogramming of various cells of the tumor microenvironment, and the potential for clinical intervention.

Highlights

  • Specialty section: This article was submitted to Molecular and Cellular Oncology, a section of the journal Frontiers in Cell and Developmental

  • Similar biomolecules are found as cargo of both exosomes and microvesicles, such as EWS-FLI1 transcripts, making it difficult to identify which type of extracellular vesicles (EVs) is associated to a specific event of tumor microenvironment (TME) reprogramming based on cargo content

  • Since IL-10 is associated with immunosuppression (Saraiva and O’Garra, 2010), these findings suggest that the presence of these transcripts in Ewing sarcoma (EwS) EVs may modulate the repertoire of cytokines produced by Tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs), to reach a fine balance that allows immunosuppression (Figure 2)

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Summary

Introduction

Specialty section: This article was submitted to Molecular and Cellular Oncology, a section of the journal Frontiers in Cell and Developmental. EwS EVs, including the smaller exosomes and larger microvesicles, have the potential to reprogram a diversity of cells in the tumor microenvironment, by transferring various biomolecules in a cell-specific manner.

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