3 research outputs found
Study of Drug Resistance in Chemotherapy Induced by Extracellular Vesicles on a Microchip
Drug resistance in chemotherapy has been greatly challenging
for
cancer treatment. Research has revealed that extracellular vesicles
(EVs) secreted by drug-resistant cells could induce chemoresistance
in susceptible cells. However, there are few ways to give direct evidence
of it. Herein, we have proposed a microchip-based system to study
the drug resistance of a wild-type human lung adenocarcinoma cell
line (A549/WT) induced by EVs derived from A549/DDP cells that are
resistant to cisplatin (DDP) inherently. EVs derived from A549/DDP
were proved to be the crucial factor that enhanced the resistance
of A549/WT to DDP through live and dead cell staining, cell viability
testing, and immunofluorescence of P-glycoprotein in the off-chip
assay. Then, it was further validated that drug resistance of A549/WT
cells to DDP significantly increased after being cocultured with A549/DDP
cells within 96 h in the on-chip assay. These findings proved that
the change of A549/WT drug resistance was caused by intercellular
interaction, which was mainly mediated by EVs. In addition, we successfully
reversed the EV-induced drug resistance of A549/WT cells by combining
DDP and metformin, a hypoglycemic drug with low cytotoxicity when
used alone. This microchip system provides a novel tool that has great
potential for the investigation of cell interaction, drug resistance,
and the tumor microenvironment in fundamental and clinical medicine
Multivalent DNA Flowers for High-Performance Isolation, Detection, and Release of Tumor-Derived Extracellular Vesicles
Tumor-derived
extracellular vesicles (T-EVs) hold great promise
for understanding cancer biology and improving cancer diagnostics
and therapeutics. Herein, we developed multivalent DNA flowers (DFs)
containing repeated and equidistant EpCAM aptamers for the efficient
isolation of T-EVs. The multivalent aptamer chains in DFs had good
flexibility to adapt to the surface morphology of T-EVs and achieved
multivalent ligand–receptor interactions, thus showing enhanced
isolation ability compared to monovalent aptamers. Compared with other
materials for isolation of EVs, DFs were generated by rolling circle
amplification (RCA) and self-assembled into microspheres in a one-pot
reaction, and the recognition molecules (aptamers) were directly replicated
and assembled during the RCA reaction instead of chemical modification
and immobilization on the surface of solid materials. Moreover, as
optically transparent biomaterials, the content of EpCAM+ EVs could be directly reflected via membrane-based hydrophobic assembly
of signaling modules in DFs@EpCAM+ EVs complex, and we
found that the amount of EpCAM+ EVs showed greater accuracy
in cancer diagnosis than total EVs (88.3 vs 69.7%) and was also higher
than the clinically commonly used marker carcinoembryonic antigen
(CEA) (88.3 vs 76.7%). In addition, T-EVs could be released by lysis
of DFs with the nuclease, gently and easily, keeping high intact and
activity of EVs for downstream biological function studies. These
results demonstrated that DFs are efficient and nondestructive tools
for isolation, detection, and release of T-EVs
Data_Sheet_1_Estradiol Attenuates the Severity of Primary Toxoplasma gondii Infection-Induced Adverse Pregnancy Outcomes Through the Regulation of Tregs in a Dose-Dependent Manner.PDF
<p>Estradiol (E2) plays a crucial and intricate role during pregnancy to mediate several aspects of the pregnancy process. A perplexing phenomenon in congenital toxoplasmosis is that the severity of Toxoplasma gondii (T. gondii)-mediated adverse pregnancy outcome is closely related with time of primary maternal infection during pregnancy. In this study, the results showed that T. gondii infection in early pregnancy was more likely to induce miscarriage in mice than in late pregnancy, which may be related to inflammation of the maternal–fetal interface. Meanwhile, the T. gondii infection-induced-apoptotic rate of Tregs was higher and the expression of programmed death-1 (PD-1) on Tregs was lower in early pregnancy than in late pregnancy. As the level of E2 in mouse serum gradually increased with the development of pregnancy, we proposed that E2 may contribute to the discrepancy of Tregs at different stages of pregnancy. Thus, we investigated in vitro and in vivo effects of E2 in regulating Tregs. We found that E2 in vitro could protect Tregs against apoptosis and upregulate the expression of PD-1 on Tregs in a dose-dependent manner through ERα. Likewise, the simulated mid-pregnancy level of E2 in nonpregnant mice also alleviated the T. gondii infection-induced apoptosis of Tregs and potentiated the PD-1 expression on Tregs. Therefore, in the pathogenesis of T. gondii-induced abnormal pregnancy, E2 helped maintain the immune balance and improve the pregnancy outcome through regulating Tregs. This finding illustrates the intricate working of hormone–immune system interaction in infection-induced abnormal pregnancy.</p
