Shared extracellular vesicle miRNA profiles of matched ductal pancreatic adenocarcinoma
organoids and blood plasma samples show the power of organoid technology
(Higher Education Institutional Excellence Programme (Ministry for Innovation and
Technology, Hungary) within the framework of the Molecular Biology and Therapeutic
thematic programmes of the Semmelweis University)
(Semmelweis Tudományos Innovációs Alap)
Subjects:
Molecular genetics
Extracellular vesicles (EV) are considered as a promising diagnostic tool for pancreatic
ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC), a disease with a poor 5-year survival that has not improved
in the past years. PDAC patient-derived 3D organoids maintain the intratumoral cellular
heterogeneity, characteristic for the tumor in vivo.Thus, they represent an ideal
in vitro model system to study human cancers. Here we show that the miRNA cargo of
EVs from PDAC organoids largely differs among patients. However, we detected a common
set of EV miRNAs that were present in matched organoids and blood plasma samples of
individual patients. Importantly, the levels of EV miR-21 and miR-195 were higher
in PDAC blood EV preparations than in healthy controls, albeit we found no difference
compared to chronic pancreatitis (CP) samples. In addition, here we report that the
accumulation of collagen I, a characteristic change in the extracellular matrix (ECM)
in both CP and PDAC, largely increases EV release from pancreatic ductal organoids.
This provides a possible explanation why both CP and PDAC patient-derived plasma samples
have an elevated amount of CD63 + EVs. Collectively, we show that PDAC patient-derived
organoids represent a highly relevant model to analyze the cargo of tumor cell-derived
EVs. Furthermore, we provide evidence that not only driver mutations, but also changes
in the ECM may critically modify EV release from pancreatic ductal cells.