[HTML][HTML] Investigation of the roles of exosomes in colorectal cancer liver metastasis

X Wang, X Ding, L Nan, Y Wang… - Oncology …, 2015 - spandidos-publications.com
X Wang, X Ding, L Nan, Y Wang, J Wang, Z Yan, W Zhang, J Sun, W Zhu, B Ni, S Dong, L Yu
Oncology reports, 2015spandidos-publications.com
The leading cause of death among cancer patients is tumor metastasis. Tumor-derived
exosomes are emerging as mediators of metastasis. In the present study, we demonstrated
that exosomes play a pivotal role in the metastatic progression of colorectal cancer. First, a
nude mouse model of colorectal cancer liver metastasis was established and characterized.
Then, we demonstrated that exosomes from a highly liver metastatic colorectal cancer cell
line (HT-29) could significantly increase the metastatic tumor burden and distribution in the …
Abstract
The leading cause of death among cancer patients is tumor metastasis. Tumor-derived exosomes are emerging as mediators of metastasis. In the present study, we demonstrated that exosomes play a pivotal role in the metastatic progression of colorectal cancer. First, a nude mouse model of colorectal cancer liver metastasis was established and characterized. Then, we demonstrated that exosomes from a highly liver metastatic colorectal cancer cell line (HT-29) could significantly increase the metastatic tumor burden and distribution in the mouse liver of Caco-2 colorectal cancer cells, which ordinarily exhibit poor liver metastatic potential. We further investigated the mechanisms by which HT-29-derived-exosomes influence the liver metastasis of colorectal cancer and found that mice treated with HT-29-derived exosomes had a relatively higher level of CXCR4 in the metastatic microenvironment, indicating that exosomes may promote colorectal cancer metastasis by recruiting CXCR4-expressing stromal cells to develop a permissive metastatic microenvironment. Finally, the migration of Caco-2 cells was significantly increased following treatment with HT-29-derived exosomes in vitro, further supporting a role for exosomes in modulating colorectal tumor-derived liver metastasis. The data from the present study may facilitate further translational medicine research into the prevention and treatment of colorectal cancer liver metastasis.
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