The Role of Exosomal Tetraspanins and Proteases in Tumor Progression


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Abstract

Major (CD9, CD63, CD81) and other (CD82, CD151, Tspan8) exosomal tetraspanins interact with various proteins and form functional tetraspanin complexes in exosomes. The tetraspanin complexes contain various proteins including proteases. Tetraspanin-associated exosomal proteases (ADAM proteases, MMPs, EMMPRIN) play an important role in cell motility, migration, invasion and formation of metastases. Proteases that are not associated with tetraspanins also significantly contribute to tumor progression. They destabilize intercellular contacts, promote migration and invasion of tumor cells, and participate in regulation of the expression IGF-I, VEGF, and the activated forms of transcription factors. The role of other exosomal proteases in tumor progression is being clarified.

About the authors

N. V. Yunusova

Cancer Research Institute, Tomsk National Research Medical Center; Siberian State Medical University

Email: etugutova@mail.ru
Russian Federation, Kooperativny per. 5, Tomsk, 634009; Tomsk

E. A. Tugutova

Cancer Research Institute, Tomsk National Research Medical Center

Author for correspondence.
Email: etugutova@mail.ru
Russian Federation, Kooperativny per. 5, Tomsk, 634009

S. N. Tamkovich

Institute of Chemical Biology and Fundamental Medicine; Novosibirsk State University; Novosibirsk State Medical University

Email: etugutova@mail.ru
Russian Federation, Novosibirsk; Novosibirsk; Novosibirsk

I. V. Kondakova

Cancer Research Institute, Tomsk National Research Medical Center

Email: etugutova@mail.ru
Russian Federation, Kooperativny per. 5, Tomsk, 634009

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