Extracellular Vesicle-Mediated Metastasis Suppressors NME1 and NME2 Modify Lipid Metabolism in Fibroblasts

Author:

Mátyási Barbara,Petővári Gábor,Dankó Titanilla,Butz HenriettORCID,Likó IstvánORCID,Lőw PéterORCID,Petit Isabelle,Bittar Randa,Bonnefont-Rousselot DominiqueORCID,Farkas Zsolt,Szeniczey Tamás,Molnár KingaORCID,Pálóczi KrisztinaORCID,Buzás Edit I.ORCID,Boissan Mathieu,Sebestyén AnnaORCID,Takács-Vellai KrisztinaORCID

Abstract

Nowadays, extracellular vesicles (EVs) raise a great interest as they are implicated in intercellular communication between cancer and stromal cells. Our aim was to understand how vesicular NME1 and NME2 released by breast cancer cells influence the tumour microenvironment. As a model, we used human invasive breast carcinoma cells overexpressing NME1 or NME2, and first analysed in detail the presence of both isoforms in EV subtypes by capillary Western immunoassay (WES) and immunoelectron microscopy. Data obtained by both methods showed that NME1 was present in medium-sized EVs or microvesicles, whereas NME2 was abundant in both microvesicles and small-sized EVs or exosomes. Next, human skin-derived fibroblasts were treated with NME1 or NME2 containing EVs, and subsequently mRNA expression changes in fibroblasts were examined. RNAseq results showed that the expression of fatty acid and cholesterol metabolism-related genes was decreased significantly in response to NME1 or NME2 containing EV treatment. We found that FASN (fatty acid synthase) and ACSS2 (acyl-coenzyme A synthetase short-chain family member 2), related to fatty acid synthesis and oxidation, were underexpressed in NME1/2-EV-treated fibroblasts. Our data show an emerging link between NME-containing EVs and regulation of tumour metabolism.

Funder

National Research, Development and Innovation Fund of Hungary

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Cancer Research,Oncology

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