Energy-requiring uptake of prostasomes and PC3 cell-derived exosomes into non-malignant and malignant cells

Karl Göran Ronquist, Claire Sanchez, Louise Dubois, Dimitris Chioureas, Pedro Fonseca, Anders Larsson, Anders Ullén, Jeffrey Yachnin, Gunnar Ronquist, Theocharis Panaretakis

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

48 Scopus citations

Abstract

Epithelial cells lining the prostate acini release, in a regulated manner (exocytosis), nanosized vesicles called prostasomes that belong to the exosome family. Prostate cancer cells have preserved this ability to generate and export exosomes to the extracellular space. We previously demonstrated that human prostasomes have an ATP-forming capacity. In this study, we compared the capacity of extracellular vesicles (EVs) to generate ATP between normal seminal prostasomes and exosomes secreted by PC3 cells (PC3 exosomes), a prostate cancer cell line. Proteomic analyses identified enzymes of the glycolytic chain in both prostasomes and PC3 exosomes, and we found that both of them were capable of generating ATP when supplied with substrates. Notably, the net production of extracellular ATP was low for prostasomes due to a high ATPase activity contrary to an elevated net ATP level for PC3 exosomes because of their low ATPase activity. The uptake of the 2 types of EVs by normal prostate epithelial cells (CRL2221) and prostate cancer cells (PC3) was visualized and measured, demonstrating differential kinetics. Interestingly, this uptake was dependent upon an ongoing glycolytic flux involving extracellular ATP formation by EVs and/or intracellular ATP produced from the recipient cells. We conclude that the internalization of EVs into recipient cells is an energy-requiring process also demanding an active V-ATPase and the capacity of EVs to generate extracellular ATP may play a role in this process.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article number29877
JournalJournal of Extracellular Vesicles
Volume5
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 1 2016
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • ATPase
  • energy metabolism
  • exosome uptake
  • exosomes
  • extracellular ATP
  • extracellular vesicles
  • glycolysis
  • prostasomes
  • prostate cancer

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Histology
  • Cell Biology

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