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Supermeres are functional extracellular nanoparticles replete with disease biomarkers and therapeutic targets

Authors :
Qin Zhang
Dennis K. Jeppesen
James N. Higginbotham
Ramona Graves-Deal
Vincent Q. Trinh
Marisol A. Ramirez
Yoojin Sohn
Abigail C. Neininger
Nilay Taneja
Eliot T. McKinley
Hiroaki Niitsu
Zheng Cao
Rachel Evans
Sarah E. Glass
Kevin C. Ray
William H. Fissell
Salisha Hill
Kristie Lindsey Rose
Won Jae Huh
Mary Kay Washington
Gregory Daniel Ayers
Dylan T. Burnette
Shivani Sharma
Leonard H. Rome
Jeffrey L. Franklin
Youngmin A. Lee
Qi Liu
Robert J. Coffey
Source :
Nature Cell Biology
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2021.

Abstract

Extracellular vesicles and exomere nanoparticles are under intense investigation as sources of clinically relevant cargo. Here we report the discovery of a distinct extracellular nanoparticle, termed supermere. Supermeres are morphologically distinct from exomeres and display a markedly greater uptake in vivo compared with small extracellular vesicles and exomeres. The protein and RNA composition of supermeres differs from small extracellular vesicles and exomeres. Supermeres are highly enriched with cargo involved in multiple cancers (glycolytic enzymes, TGFBI, miR-1246, MET, GPC1 and AGO2), Alzheimer’s disease (APP) and cardiovascular disease (ACE2, ACE and PCSK9). The majority of extracellular RNA is associated with supermeres rather than small extracellular vesicles and exomeres. Cancer-derived supermeres increase lactate secretion, transfer cetuximab resistance and decrease hepatic lipids and glycogen in vivo. This study identifies a distinct functional nanoparticle replete with potential circulating biomarkers and therapeutic targets for a host of human diseases.<br />Zhang et al. identify and characterize supermeres as extracellular nanoparticles that exhibit unique biological and functional properties with potential prognostic and therapeutic value across distinct diseases.

Details

ISSN :
14764679 and 14657392
Volume :
23
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Cell Biology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0d7f73ed53b484e4d6259c39e78954d2
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41556-021-00805-8