Mary Wang, Arin N Graner, Bryne Knowles, Charlotte McRae, Anthony Fringuello, Petr Paucek, Michael Gavrilovic, McKenna Redwine, Caleb Hanson, Christina Coughlan, Stacey Grimaldo-Garcia, Brooke Metzger, Vince Bolus, Timothy J Kopper, Marie Smith, Wenbo Zhou, Morgan Lenz, Aviva Abosch, Steven Ojemann, Kevin O Lillehei, Xiaoli Yu, Michael W Graner
{"title":"两种不同胶质母细胞瘤的细胞外小泡对正常人脑细胞的不同影响","authors":"Mary Wang, Arin N Graner, Bryne Knowles, Charlotte McRae, Anthony Fringuello, Petr Paucek, Michael Gavrilovic, McKenna Redwine, Caleb Hanson, Christina Coughlan, Stacey Grimaldo-Garcia, Brooke Metzger, Vince Bolus, Timothy J Kopper, Marie Smith, Wenbo Zhou, Morgan Lenz, Aviva Abosch, Steven Ojemann, Kevin O Lillehei, Xiaoli Yu, Michael W Graner","doi":"10.3390/neurolint16060103","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><p><b>Background/Objectives:</b> Glioblastomas (GBMs) are dreadful brain tumors with abysmal survival outcomes. GBM extracellular vesicles (EVs) dramatically affect normal brain cells (largely astrocytes) constituting the tumor microenvironment (TME). We asked if EVs from different GBM patient-derived spheroid lines would differentially alter recipient brain cell phenotypes. This turned out to be the case, with the net outcome of treatment with GBM EVs nonetheless converging on increased tumorigenicity. <b>Methods:</b> GBM spheroids and brain slices were derived from neurosurgical patient tissues following informed consent. Astrocytes were commercially obtained. EVs were isolated from conditioned culture media by ultrafiltration, concentration, and ultracentrifugation. EVs were characterized by nanoparticle tracking analysis, electron microscopy, biochemical markers, and proteomics. Astrocytes/brain tissues were treated with GBM EVs before downstream analyses. <b>Results:</b> EVs from different GBMs induced brain cells to alter secretomes with pro-inflammatory or TME-modifying (proteolytic) effects. Astrocyte responses ranged from anti-viral gene/protein expression and cytokine release to altered extracellular signal-regulated protein kinase (ERK1/2) signaling pathways, and conditioned media from EV-treated cells increased GBM cell proliferation. <b>Conclusions:</b> Astrocytes/brain slices treated with different GBM EVs underwent non-identical changes in various omics readouts and other assays, indicating \"personalized\" tumor-specific GBM EV effects on the TME. This raises concern regarding reliance on \"model\" systems as a sole basis for translational direction. Nonetheless, net downstream impacts from differential cellular and TME effects still led to increased tumorigenic capacities for the different GBMs.</p>","PeriodicalId":19130,"journal":{"name":"Neurology International","volume":"16 6","pages":"1355-1384"},"PeriodicalIF":3.2000,"publicationDate":"2024-11-06","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Differential Effects of Extracellular Vesicles from Two Different Glioblastomas on Normal Human Brain Cells.\",\"authors\":\"Mary Wang, Arin N Graner, Bryne Knowles, Charlotte McRae, Anthony Fringuello, Petr Paucek, Michael Gavrilovic, McKenna Redwine, Caleb Hanson, Christina Coughlan, Stacey Grimaldo-Garcia, Brooke Metzger, Vince Bolus, Timothy J Kopper, Marie Smith, Wenbo Zhou, Morgan Lenz, Aviva Abosch, Steven Ojemann, Kevin O Lillehei, Xiaoli Yu, Michael W Graner\",\"doi\":\"10.3390/neurolint16060103\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p><p><b>Background/Objectives:</b> Glioblastomas (GBMs) are dreadful brain tumors with abysmal survival outcomes. GBM extracellular vesicles (EVs) dramatically affect normal brain cells (largely astrocytes) constituting the tumor microenvironment (TME). We asked if EVs from different GBM patient-derived spheroid lines would differentially alter recipient brain cell phenotypes. This turned out to be the case, with the net outcome of treatment with GBM EVs nonetheless converging on increased tumorigenicity. <b>Methods:</b> GBM spheroids and brain slices were derived from neurosurgical patient tissues following informed consent. Astrocytes were commercially obtained. EVs were isolated from conditioned culture media by ultrafiltration, concentration, and ultracentrifugation. EVs were characterized by nanoparticle tracking analysis, electron microscopy, biochemical markers, and proteomics. Astrocytes/brain tissues were treated with GBM EVs before downstream analyses. <b>Results:</b> EVs from different GBMs induced brain cells to alter secretomes with pro-inflammatory or TME-modifying (proteolytic) effects. Astrocyte responses ranged from anti-viral gene/protein expression and cytokine release to altered extracellular signal-regulated protein kinase (ERK1/2) signaling pathways, and conditioned media from EV-treated cells increased GBM cell proliferation. <b>Conclusions:</b> Astrocytes/brain slices treated with different GBM EVs underwent non-identical changes in various omics readouts and other assays, indicating \\\"personalized\\\" tumor-specific GBM EV effects on the TME. This raises concern regarding reliance on \\\"model\\\" systems as a sole basis for translational direction. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
背景/目标:胶质母细胞瘤(GBM)是一种可怕的脑肿瘤,存活率极低。GBM 细胞外囊泡(EVs)会显著影响构成肿瘤微环境(TME)的正常脑细胞(主要是星形胶质细胞)。我们询问来自不同 GBM 患者衍生球状细胞系的 EV 是否会不同程度地改变受体脑细胞表型。事实证明确实如此,用 GBM EVs 治疗的净结果还是趋向于增加致瘤性。方法GBM 球形细胞和脑切片来自神经外科患者的知情同意组织。星形胶质细胞通过商业途径获得。通过超滤、浓缩和超速离心从条件培养基中分离出 EVs。通过纳米粒子跟踪分析、电子显微镜、生化标记和蛋白质组学对 EVs 进行表征。在进行下游分析之前,用 GBM EVs 处理星形胶质细胞/脑组织。结果来自不同GBM的EV诱导脑细胞改变具有促炎或TME修饰(蛋白水解)作用的分泌物组。星形胶质细胞的反应包括抗病毒基因/蛋白表达和细胞因子释放,以及细胞外信号调节蛋白激酶(ERK1/2)信号通路的改变。结论经不同 GBM EV 处理的星形胶质细胞/脑片在各种全息图读数和其他检测中发生了不相同的变化,这表明肿瘤特异性 GBM EV 对 TME 的影响是 "个性化 "的。这引起了人们对依赖 "模型 "系统作为转化方向唯一依据的担忧。尽管如此,不同细胞和肿瘤组织生长因子效应的净下游影响仍然导致不同 GBM 的致瘤能力增加。
Differential Effects of Extracellular Vesicles from Two Different Glioblastomas on Normal Human Brain Cells.
Background/Objectives: Glioblastomas (GBMs) are dreadful brain tumors with abysmal survival outcomes. GBM extracellular vesicles (EVs) dramatically affect normal brain cells (largely astrocytes) constituting the tumor microenvironment (TME). We asked if EVs from different GBM patient-derived spheroid lines would differentially alter recipient brain cell phenotypes. This turned out to be the case, with the net outcome of treatment with GBM EVs nonetheless converging on increased tumorigenicity. Methods: GBM spheroids and brain slices were derived from neurosurgical patient tissues following informed consent. Astrocytes were commercially obtained. EVs were isolated from conditioned culture media by ultrafiltration, concentration, and ultracentrifugation. EVs were characterized by nanoparticle tracking analysis, electron microscopy, biochemical markers, and proteomics. Astrocytes/brain tissues were treated with GBM EVs before downstream analyses. Results: EVs from different GBMs induced brain cells to alter secretomes with pro-inflammatory or TME-modifying (proteolytic) effects. Astrocyte responses ranged from anti-viral gene/protein expression and cytokine release to altered extracellular signal-regulated protein kinase (ERK1/2) signaling pathways, and conditioned media from EV-treated cells increased GBM cell proliferation. Conclusions: Astrocytes/brain slices treated with different GBM EVs underwent non-identical changes in various omics readouts and other assays, indicating "personalized" tumor-specific GBM EV effects on the TME. This raises concern regarding reliance on "model" systems as a sole basis for translational direction. Nonetheless, net downstream impacts from differential cellular and TME effects still led to increased tumorigenic capacities for the different GBMs.