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The Biology of Exosomes in Breast Cancer Progression: Dissemination, Immune Evasion and Metastatic Colonization

Cinzia Giordano, Giusi La Camera, Luca Gelsomino, Ines Barone, Daniela Bonofiglio, Sebastiano Andò, Stefania Catalano

2020Cancers69 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

In recent decades, the study of exosome biology has gained growing interest, representing an active area of cancer research with many potential clinical applications. Exosomes are small lipid bilayer particles released by cells with pleiotropic functions that have been reported to regulate the complex intracellular pathway involved in all steps of breast cancer development-from initiation to progression toward a metastatic dissemination. Particularly, the role of these microvesicles has been explored in metastasis, which represents the leading cause of breast cancer morbidity and mortality worldwide. Reports highlight that the plasticity of breast cancer cells, fundamental for the establishment of distant metastasis, may be in part attributed to exosome-carried signals shared between adjacent cells and long-distance cells in the body. In the present review, we will discuss the functions of exosomes in the metastatic breast cancer process and secondary site outgrowth. The possibility to decode the exosome functions in advanced diseases may offer new opportunities for early detection, molecular targeted therapies and exosome-based therapeutics in breast cancer.

Topics & Concepts

MicrovesiclesExosomeMetastasisBreast cancerCancerImmune systemMetastatic breast cancerBiologyCancer researchCancer cellMedicineImmunologymicroRNAInternal medicineBiochemistryGeneExtracellular vesicles in diseaseMicroRNA in disease regulationCircular RNAs in diseases
The Biology of Exosomes in Breast Cancer Progression: Dissemination, Immune Evasion and Metastatic Colonization | Litcius