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Glioma cells enhance angiogenesis and inhibit endothelial cell apoptosis through the release of exosomes that contain long non-coding RNA CCAT2
- Source :
- Oncology Reports
- Publication Year :
- 2017
- Publisher :
- Spandidos Publications, 2017.
-
Abstract
- Angiogenesis is a key event in the progression of gliomas. Exosomes, as signaling extracellular organelles, modulate the tumor microenvironment and promote angiogenesis and tumor progression. We previously demonstrated that long intergenic non-coding RNA CCAT2 (linc-CCAT2) was overexpressed in glioma tissues and functioned to promote glioma progression. Therefore, this study aimed to explore an underlying mechanism of glioma cell-affected angiogenesis. First, qRT-PCR was used to determine the expression level of linc-CCAT2 in 4 glioma cell lines and 293T cells, and the results revealed that the U87-MG cells exhibited the highest expression level. Subsequently, the pro-angiogenesis function of exosomes that were derived from negative control shRNA-treated U87-MG cells (ncU87-Exo) and linc-CCAT2 shRNA-treated U87-MG cells (shU87-Exo) was evaluated in vitro and in vivo. We found that ncU87-Exo, which was enriched in linc-CCAT2, could be taken up by HUVECs. ncU87-Exo improved the linc-CCAT2 expression level in HUVECs and more strongly promoted HUVEC migration, proliferation, tubular-like structure formation in vitro and arteriole formation in vivo as well as inhibited HUVEC apoptosis induced by hypoxia. Further mechanistic studies revealed that ncU87-Exo could upregulate VEGFA and TGFβ expression in HUVECs as well as promote Bcl-2 expression and inhibit Bax and caspase-3 expression. Finally, gain-/loss-of-function studies revealed that the overexpression of linc-CCAT2 in HUVECs activated VEGFA and TGFβ, promoted angiogenesis, promoted Bcl-2 expression and inhibited Bax and caspase-3 expression, thus decreasing apoptosis. Downregulation of linc-CCAT2 revealed the opposite effect. Thus, our results revealed a new exosome‑mediated mechanism by which glioma cells could promote angiogenesis through the transfer of linc-CCAT2 by exosomes to endothelial cells. Moreover, we suggest that exosomes and linc-CCAT2 are putative therapeutic targets in glioma.
- Subjects :
- 0301 basic medicine
linc-CCAT2
Cancer Research
Angiogenesis
Cell
exosomes
Biology
angiogenesis
03 medical and health sciences
Cell Line, Tumor
Glioma
Human Umbilical Vein Endothelial Cells
Tumor Microenvironment
medicine
Humans
RNA, Small Interfering
Cell Proliferation
Tumor microenvironment
Neovascularization, Pathologic
apoptosis
Endothelial Cells
Articles
General Medicine
medicine.disease
Microvesicles
Cell biology
Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic
Vascular endothelial growth factor A
030104 developmental biology
medicine.anatomical_structure
Oncology
glioma cells
Tumor progression
Cell culture
Cancer research
RNA, Long Noncoding
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 17912431 and 1021335X
- Volume :
- 38
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Oncology Reports
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....bde2fec57b6546856843bf6d0fc4189b