Journal of Translational Medicine (Jun 2024)

Exosomes multiplex profiling, a promising strategy for early diagnosis of laryngeal cancer

  • Marco Bocchetti,
  • Amalia Luce,
  • Clara Iannarone,
  • Lucia Stefania Pasquale,
  • Michela Falco,
  • Chiara Tammaro,
  • Marianna Abate,
  • Maria Grazia Ferraro,
  • Raffaele Addeo,
  • Filippo Ricciardiello,
  • Giovanni Motta,
  • Luca De Stefano,
  • Francesco Caraglia,
  • Anna Ceccarelli,
  • Silvia Zappavigna,
  • Marianna Scrima,
  • Alessia Maria Cossu,
  • Michele Caraglia,
  • Gabriella Misso

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12967-024-05396-0
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 22, no. 1
pp. 1 – 9

Abstract

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Abstract Background Exosomes are nanosized vesicles released from all cells into surrounding biofluids, including cancer cells, and represent a very promising direction in terms of minimally invasive approaches to early disease detection. They carry tumor-specific biological contents such as DNA, RNA, proteins, lipids, and sugars, as well as surface molecules that are able to pinpoint the cellular source. By the above criteria, exosomes may be stratified according to the presence of tissue and disease-specific signatures and, due to their stability in such biofluids as plasma and serum, they represent an indispensable source of vital clinical insights from liquid biopsies, even at the earliest stages of cancer. Therefore, our work aimed to isolate and characterize LCa patients’ derived exosomes from serum by Flow Cytometry in order to define a specific epitope signature exploitable for early diagnosis. Methods Circulating exosomes were collected from serum collected from 30 LCa patients and 20 healthy volunteers by the use of antibody affinity method exploiting CD63 specific surface marker. Membrane epitopes were then characterized by Flow cytometry multiplex analysis and compared between LCa Patients and Healthy donors. Clinical data were also matched to obtain statistical correlation. Results A distinct overexpression of CD1c, CD2, CD3, CD4, CD11c, CD14, CD20, CD44, CD56, CD105, CD146, and CD209 was identified in LCa patients compared to healthy controls, correlating positively with tumor presence. Conversely, CD24, CD31, and CD40, though not overexpressed in tumor samples, showed a significant correlation with nodal involvement in LCa patients (p < 0.01). Conclusion This approach could allow us to set up a cost-effective and less invasive liquid biopsy protocol from a simple blood collection in order to early diagnose LCa and improve patients’ outcomes and quality of life. Graphical Abstract

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