Exosome Secretion Is Enhanced by Invadopodia and Drives Invasive Behavior
Vanderbilt University Medical Center · University of Miami
Abstract
Unconventional secretion of exosome vesicles from multivesicular endosomes (MVEs) occurs across a broad set of systems and is reported to be upregulated in cancer, where it promotes aggressive behavior. However, regulatory control of exosome secretion is poorly understood. Using cancer cells, we identified specialized invasive actin structures called invadopodia as specific and critical docking and secretion sites for CD63- and Rab27a-positive MVEs. Thus, inhibition of invadopodia formation greatly reduced exosome secretion into conditioned media. Functionally, addition of purified exosomes or inhibition of exosome biogenesis or secretion greatly affected multiple invadopodia life cycle steps, including…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 10.92
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 24
Authors
8Topics & keywords
- Invadopodia
- Microvesicles
- Exosome
- Cell biology
- Secretion
- Endosome
- Biogenesis
- Exocytosis
- Responsible consumption and production