posted on 2022-10-26, 19:05authored byMengfei Xue, Siyuan Ye, Xiaopeng Ma, Fangfu Ye, Chen Wang, Ling Zhu, Yanlian Yang, Jianing Chen
Protein
heterogeneity in molecular expression and structures
determines
tumorigenesis and is the diagnostic and therapeutic cancer biomarker.
Small extracellular vesicles (sEVs) are cell-released nanoscaled membrane-bound
vesicles transferring bioactive molecules for intercellular communication
and playing essential roles in tumor progression and metastasis. Therefore,
protein heterogeneity in tumor-derived sEVs indicates the degree of
malignant transformation, providing a noninvasive biomarker for cancer
diagnosis and malignancy evaluation. We employ near-field infrared
(nano-FTIR) spectroscopy to investigate malignancy-related protein
heterogeneity in a single sEV and demonstrate the discriminability
of sEV protein heterogeneity to evaluate tumor malignancy and metastasis.
We found that the amide I/II adsorption ratio of the sEVs increases
with tumor malignancy, the proportion of α-helix + random coil
(α-helix and random coil) in sEV proteins decreases with tumor
malignancy, and the proportion of β-sheet + β-turn (β-sheet
and β-turn) increases with tumor malignancy. These nano-FTIR
spectral signatures of the sEVs from the primary tumor tissue of breast
cancer patients show high sensitivity and specificity in evaluating
tumor metastasis. This study shows the advantages of nano-FTIR in
single sEV characterization and demonstrates the significance of sEV
protein heterogeneity in cancer diagnosis. It provides a noninvasive
solution to elucidate cancer development and facilitates the exploitation
of potential cancer biomarkers.