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Monday, October 27, 2014

The Nutshell: Tumor Exosomes Make microRNAs

Tumor Exosomes Make microRNAs

Cellular blebs shed by tumor cells can process short stretches of RNA that go on to induce tumor formation in neighboring cells.

By | October 27, 2014
 
WIKIMEDIA, NATIONAL CANCER INSTITUTE
Cells give off little membrane-bound bubbles called exosomes, which are known to contain microRNAs (miRNAs)—short stretches of RNA that can interfere with protein production. Exosomes have also been associated with cancer metastasis. According to a  study published in Cell last week (October 23), tumor-linked exosomes can produce their own miRNAs from starter material, and these miRNAs can enter neighboring cells and incite them to form tumors.
 
“Collectively, this study unravels the possible role cancer exosomes play in inducing an oncogenic ‘field effect’ that further subjugates adjacent normal cells to participate in cancer development and progression,” Raghu Kalluri, a cancer biologist at MD Anderson Cancer Center, and his coauthors wrote in their report.
 
Comparing exosomes derived from normal cells to those derived from breast cancer cells, Kalluri’s
team found the proteins responsible for chopping up miRNA precursors into their mature form present only in the cancer exosomes. When normal cells were implanted into a mouse alongside cancer exosomes, those normal cells formed tumors. However, blocking an miRNA-processing protein called Dicer in the cancer exosomes obliterated tumor formation, “suggesting that miRNA biogenesis in exosomes contributes to cancer progression,” the authors wrote.
 
“It’s amazing—these vesicles were considered garbage cans,” Khalid Al-Nedawi, a cancer researcher at McMaster University in Hamilton, Canada, told Nature News. “This paper really brings us closer to harnessing the potential of these tiny vesicles.”
 
http://www.the-scientist.com/?articles.view/articleNo/41319/title/Tumor-Exosomes-Make-microRNAs/

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