Cellular stress conditions are reflected in the protein and RNA content of endothelial cell‐derived exosomes
University Medical Center Utrecht · National Institutes of Health · +2 more institutions
Abstract
The healthy vascular endothelium, which forms the barrier between blood and the surrounding tissues, is known to efficiently respond to stress signals like hypoxia and inflammation by adaptation of cellular physiology and the secretion of (soluble) growth factors and cytokines. Exosomes are potent mediators of intercellular communication. Their content consists of RNA and proteins from the cell of origin, and thus depends on the condition of these cells at the time of exosome biogenesis. It has been suggested that exosomes protect their target cells from cellular stress through the transfer of RNA and proteins. We hypothesized that endothelium-derived exosomes are involved in the endothelial response to cellular stress, and that exosome RNA and protein content reflect the effects of cellular stress induced by hypoxia, inflammation or hyperglycemia.
We exposed cultured endothelial cells to different types of cellular stress (hypoxia, TNF-α-induced activation, high glucose and mannose concentrations) and compared mRNA and protein content of exosomes produced by these cells by microarray analysis and a quantitative proteomics approach.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 10.34
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 68
Authors
9- OGOlivier G. de JongCorresponding
University Medical Center Utrecht
- MCMarianne C. Verhaar
University Medical Center Utrecht
- YCYong Chen
National Institutes of Health, National Heart Lung and Blood Institute
- PVPieter Vader
Utrecht University, University Medical Center Utrecht
- HGHendrik Gremmels
University Medical Center Utrecht
Topics & keywords
- Microvesicles
- RNA
- Cell biology
- Cell
- Chemistry
- Biology
- microRNA
- Biochemistry