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RESEARCH PRODUCT

A novel 3D heterotypic spheroid model for studying extracellular vesicle-mediated tumour and immune cell communication

Elīna ZandbergaAija LineKrizia SaginiUna RiekstiņaZane KalniņaAlicia LlorenteLilite SadovskaKaspars Jēkabsons

subject

0301 basic medicineCell signalingT cellPopulationBiophysicsCell CommunicationBiochemistryExtracellular Vesicles03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineImmune systemCell Line TumorSpheroids CellularmedicineHumanseducationMolecular Biologyeducation.field_of_studyChemistryNeoplasms ExperimentalCell BiologyExtracellular vesicleCoculture TechniquesCell biology030104 developmental biologymedicine.anatomical_structureCell culture030220 oncology & carcinogenesisCancer cellLeukocytes MononuclearCD8

description

Cancer-derived extracellular vesicles (EVs) have emerged as important mediators of tumour-host interactions, and they have been shown to exert various functional effects in immune cells. In most of the studies on human immune cells, EVs have been isolated from cancer cell culture medium or patients' body fluids and added to the immune cell cultures. In such a setting, the physiological relevance of the chosen EV concentration is unknown and the EV isolation method and the timing of EV administration may bias the results. In the current study we aimed to develop an experimental cell culture model to study EV-mediated effects in human T and B cells at conditions mimicking the tumour microenvironment. We constructed a human prostate cancer cell line PC3 producing GFP-tagged EVs (PC3-CD63-GFP cells) and developed a 3D heterotypic spheroid model composed of PC3-CD63-GFP cells and human peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs). The transfer of GFP-tagged EVs from PC3-CD63-GFP cells to the lymphocytes was analysed by flow cytometry and fluorescence imaging. The endocytic pathway was investigated using three endocytosis inhibitors. Our results showed that GFP-tagged EVs interacted with a large fraction of B cells, however, the majority of EVs were not internalised by B cells but rather remained bound at the cell surface. T cell subsets differed in their ability to interact with the EVs - 15.7-24.1% of the total CD3+ T cell population interacted with GFP-tagged EVs, while only 0.3-5.8% of CD8+ T were GFP positive. Furthermore, a fraction of EVs were internalised in CD3+ T cells via macropinocytosis. Taken together, the heterotypic PC3-CD63-GFP and PBMC spheroid model provides the opportunity to study the interactions and functional effects of cancer-derived EVs in human immune cells at conditions mimicking the tumour microenvironment.

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bbrc.2017.12.072