Advanced Genetics (Mar 2022)

In Vitro and In Vivo Analysis of Extracellular Vesicle‐Mediated Metastasis Using a Bright, Red‐Shifted Bioluminescent Reporter Protein

  • Gloria I. Perez,
  • David Broadbent,
  • Ahmed A. Zarea,
  • Benedikt Dolgikh,
  • Matthew P. Bernard,
  • Alicia Withrow,
  • Amelia McGill,
  • Victoria Toomajian,
  • Lukose K. Thampy,
  • Jack Harkema,
  • Joel R. Walker,
  • Thomas A. Kirkland,
  • Michael H. Bachmann,
  • Jens Schmidt,
  • Masamitsu Kanada

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/ggn2.202100055
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3, no. 1
pp. n/a – n/a

Abstract

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Abstract Cancer cells produce heterogeneous extracellular vesicles (EVs) as mediators of intercellular communication. This study focuses on a novel method to image EV subtypes and their biodistribution in vivo. A red‐shifted bioluminescence resonance energy transfer (BRET) EV reporter is developed, called PalmReNL, which allows for highly sensitive EV tracking in vitro and in vivo. PalmReNL enables the authors to study the common surface molecules across EV subtypes that determine EV organotropism and their functional differences in cancer progression. Regardless of injection routes, whether retro‐orbital or intraperitoneal, PalmReNL positive EVs, isolated from murine mammary carcinoma cells, localized to the lungs. The early appearance of metastatic foci in the lungs of mammary tumor‐bearing mice following multiple intraperitoneal injections of the medium and large EV (m/lEV)‐enriched fraction derived from mammary carcinoma cells is demonstrated. In addition, the results presented here show that tumor cell‐derived m/lEVs act on distant tissues through upregulating LC3 expression within the lung.

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