QIMR Berghofer

The Biodistribution and Immune Suppressive Effects of Breast Cancer-Derived Exosomes

Abstract

Small membranous secretions from tumor cells, termed exosomes, contribute significantly to intercellular communication and subsequent reprogramming of the tumor microenvironment. Here, we use optical imaging to determine that exogenously administered fluorescently labeled exosomes derived from highly metastatic murine breast cancer cells distributed predominantly to the lung of syngeneic mice, a frequent site of breast cancer metastasis. At the sites of accumulation, exosomes were taken up by CD45(+) bone marrow-derived cells. Subsequent long-term conditioning of naive mice with exosomes from highly metastatic breast cancer cells revealed the accumulation of myeloid-derived suppressor cells in the lung and liver. This favorable immune suppressive microenvironment was capable of promoting metastatic colonization in the lung and liver, an effect not observed from exosomes derived from nonmetastatic cells and liposome control vesicles. Furthermore, we determined that breast cancer exosomes directly suppressed T-cell proliferation and inhibited NK cell cytotoxicity, and hence likely suppressed the anticancer immune response in premetastatic organs. Together, our findings provide novel insight into the tissue-specific outcomes of breast cancer-derived exosome accumulation and their contribution to immune suppression and promotion of metastases. (C) 2016 AACR.

Authors Wen, Shu Wen; Sceneay, Jaclyn; Lima, Luize Goncalves; Wong, Christina S. F.; Becker, Melanie; Krumeich, Sophie; Lobb, Richard J.; Castillo, Vanessa; Wong, Ke Ni; Ellis, Sarah; Parker, Belinda S.; Moller, Andreas
Journal CANCER RESEARCH
Pages 6816-6827
Volume 76
Date 1/12/2016
Grant ID
Funding Body
URL http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/?term=10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-16-0868
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