Exosomal and Non-Exosomal MicroRNAs: New Kids on the Block for Cancer Therapy.
Syed. Shahzad Nawaz SN; Brüne. Bernhard B
Key Findings
- miRNAs are released from cells in two forms: exosomal (inside vesicles) and non-exosomal (free).
- Tumor‑derived miRNAs tend to promote cancer, whereas host‑derived miRNAs often have anti‑tumor effects.
- Understanding how these miRNAs communicate in the tumor microenvironment could lead to new RNA‑based cancer therapies.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers and self‑experimenters, this study does not provide any immediate protocols or dosage guidance. It mainly highlights a future direction in cancer treatment research, suggesting that miRNA‑based therapies may become a tool down the line, but there are no actionable steps to apply today.
Summary
The paper explains that tiny RNA molecules called microRNAs (miRNAs) can travel outside cells either inside tiny bubbles (exosomes) or on their own. In cancer, miRNAs from tumor cells usually help the tumor grow, while miRNAs from normal cells can fight the tumor. Scientists are looking at ways to use these miRNAs as new cancer treatments, but the research is still early and not ready for everyday use.
Abstract
MicroRNAs have been projected as promising tools for diagnostic and prognostic purposes in cancer. More recently, they have been highlighted as RNA therapeutic targets for cancer therapy. Though miRs perform a generic function of post-transcriptional gene regulation, their utility in RNA therapeutics mostly relies on their biochemical nature and their assembly with other macromolecules. Release of extracellular miRs is broadly categorized into two different compositions, namely exosomal (extracellular vesicles) and non-exosomal. This nature of miRs not only affects the uptake into target cells but also poses a challenge and opportunity for RNA therapeutics in cancer. By virtue of their ability to act as mediators of intercellular communication in the tumor microenvironment, extracellular miRs perform both, depending upon the target cell and target landscape, pro- and anti-tumor functions. Tumor-derived miRs mostly perform pro-tumor functions, whereas host cell- or stroma-derived miRs are involved in anti-tumor activities. This review deals with the recent understanding of exosomal and non-exosomal miRs in the tumor microenvironment, as a tool for pro- and anti-tumor activity and prospective exploit options for cancer therapy.
Study Information
pubmed
2022
2022-04-19T00:00:00.000Z
10.3390/ijms23094493
19
152