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Exosome uptake depends on ERK1/2-heat shock protein 27 signalling and lipid raft-mediated endocytosis negatively regulated by caveolin-1.

Author

Summary, in English

The role of exosomes in cancer can be inferred from the observation that they transfer tumor cell derived genetic material and signalling proteins, resulting in e.g. increased tumor angiogenesis and metastasis. However, the membrane transport mechanisms and the signalling events involved in the uptake of these virus-like particles remain ill-defined. We now report that internalization of exosomes derived from glioblastoma (GBM) cells involves nonclassical, lipid raft-dependent endocytosis. Importantly, we show that the lipid raft associated protein caveolin-1 (CAV1), in analogy with its previously described role in virus uptake, negatively regulates the uptake of exosomes. We find that exosomes induce the phosphorylation of several downstream targets known to associate with lipid rafts as signalling and sorting platforms, such as extracellular signal-regulated kinase-1/2 (ERK1/2) and heat shock protein 27 (HSP27). Interestingly, exosome uptake appears dependent on unperturbed ERK1/2-HSP27 signalling, and ERK1/2 phosphorylation is under negative influence by CAV1 during internalization of exosomes. These findings significantly advance our general understanding of exosome-mediated uptake and offer potential strategies for how this pathway may be targeted through modulation of CAV1 expression and ERK1/2 signaling.

Department/s

Publishing year

2013

Language

English

Pages

17713-17724

Publication/Series

Journal of Biological Chemistry

Volume

288

Issue

24

Links

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology

Topic

  • Basic Medicine
  • Infectious Medicine
  • Cancer and Oncology

Status

Published

Research group

  • Tumor microenvironment

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 1083-351X