Transcriptomic analysis and fusion gene identifications of midbody remnants released from colorectal cancer cells reveals they are molecularly distinct from exosomes and microparticles

Author:

Suwakulsiri Wittaya12ORCID,Xu Rong3,Rai Alin456,Chen Maoshan7,Shafiq Adnan8,Greening David W.456ORCID,Simpson Richard J.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biochemistry and Chemistry La Trobe Institute for Molecular Science (LIMS) School of Agriculture Biomedicine and Environment La Trobe University Melbourne Victoria Australia

2. School of Biomedical Engineering Faculty of Engineering The University of Sydney Darlington New South Wales Australia

3. Nanobiotechnology Laboratory Australia Centre for Blood Diseases Centre Clinical School Monash University Melbourne Victoria Australia

4. Baker Heart and Diabetes Institute Melbourne Victoria Australia

5. Baker Department of Cardiovascular Research Translation and Implementation La Trobe University Melbourne Victoria Australia

6. Baker Department of Cardiometabolic Health University of Melbourne Melbourne Victoria Australia

7. Laboratory of Radiation Biology Department of Blood Transfusion Laboratory Medicine Centre The Second Affiliated Hospital Army Medical University Chongqing China

8. Department of Cell & Developmental Biology School of Medicine Vanderbilt University Nashville Tennessee USA

Abstract

AbstractPreviously, we reported that human primary (SW480) and metastatic (SW620) colorectal (CRC) cells release three classes of membrane‐encapsulated extracellular vesicles (EVs); midbody remnants (MBRs), exosomes (Exos), and microparticles (MPs). We reported that MBRs were molecularly distinct at the protein level. To gain further biochemical insights into MBRs, Exos, and MPs and their emerging role in CRC, we performed, and report here, for the first time, a comprehensive transcriptome and long noncoding RNA sequencing analysis and fusion gene identification of these three EV classes using the next‐generation RNA sequencing technique. Differential transcript expression analysis revealed that MBRs have a distinct transcriptomic profile compared to Exos and MPs with a high enrichment of mitochondrial transcripts lncRNA/pseudogene transcripts that are predicted to bind to ribonucleoprotein complexes, spliceosome, and RNA/stress granule proteins. A salient finding from this study is a high enrichment of several fusion genes in MBRs compared to Exos, MPs, and cell lysates from their parental cells such as MSH2 (gene encoded DNA mismatch repair protein MSH2). This suggests potential EV‐liquid biopsy targets for cancer detection. Importantly, the expression of cancer progression‐related transcripts found in EV classes derived from SW480 (EGFR) and SW620 (MET and MACCA1) cell lines reflects their parental cell types. Our study is the report of RNA and fusion gene compositions within MBRs (including Exos and MPs) that could have an impact on EV functionality in cancer progression and detection using EV‐based RNA/ fusion gene candidates for cancer biomarkers.

Publisher

Wiley

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