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- Title
Arginase-1 in Plasma-Derived Exosomes as Marker of Metastasis in Patients with Head and Neck Squamous Cell Carcinoma.
- Authors
Hofmann, Linda; Harasymczuk, Malgorzata; Huber, Diana; Szczepanski, Miroslaw J.; Dworacki, Grzegorz; Whiteside, Theresa L.; Theodoraki, Marie-Nicole
- Abstract
Simple Summary: Head and neck cancer creates a highly immunosuppressive microenvironment, to which the enzyme Arginase-1 contributes. The impact of Arginase-1 on the clinicopathology and prognosis of head and neck cancer, however, is not fully understood. We evaluated Arginase-1 protein levels in both the tumors and plasma of patients. Patients with high tumor Arginase-1 levels had better clinicopathology and prognosis, while patients with high plasma Arginase-1 levels had unfavorable clinicopathology. We attributed this difference to the presence of Arginase-1-positive exosomes in the blood of patients. Exosomes, small vesicles for intercellular communication, are released by cancer cells and can travel through the body. Patients with high Arginase-1 levels in these exosomes had lymph node metastasis and poor prognosis. We conclude that exosomes can export Arginase-1 from the tumor to the periphery for further immunosuppression. Exosomal Arginase-1 might be a better indicator of metastatic disease and prognosis than tissue or plasma Argianse-1. Immunoregulatory Arginase-1 (Arg-1) is present in the tumor microenvironment of solid tumors. Its association to clinicopathology and its prognostic impact are inconsistent among different tumor types and biological fluids. This study evaluated Arg-1 protein levels in tumors and the circulation of patients with head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) in relation to clinical stage and prognosis. Tumor Arg-1 expression was monitored via immunohistochemistry while plasma Arg-1 levels via ELISA in 37 HNSCC patients. Arg-1 presence in plasma-derived exosomes was assessed using Western blots in 20 HNSCC patients. High tumor Arg-1 expression correlated with favorable clinicopathology and longer recurrence-free survival (RFS), while high plasma Arg-1 levels were associated with unfavorable clinicopathology. All patients with low tumor and high plasma Arg-1 had nodal metastases and developed recurrence. This discrepancy was attributed to the presence of Arg-1-carrying exosomes. Arg-1 was found in plasma-derived exosomes from all HNSCC patients. High exosomal Arg-1 levels were associated with positive lymph nodes and short RFS. Circulating Arg-1+ exosomes represent a mechanism of active Arg-1 export from the tumor to the periphery. Exosomes reflected biologically relevant Arg-1 levels in metastatic HNSCC and emerged as potentially more accurate biomarkers of metastatic disease and RFS than tissue or plasma Arg-1 levels.
- Subjects
PROTEIN metabolism; EXOSOMES; BLOOD plasma; IMMUNOHISTOCHEMISTRY; WESTERN immunoblotting; HEAD &; neck cancer; METASTASIS; CANCER relapse; TUMOR classification; CANCER patients; ENZYME-linked immunosorbent assay; RESEARCH funding; TUMOR markers; PROGRESSION-free survival; CELL lines; SQUAMOUS cell carcinoma
- Publication
Cancers, 2023, Vol 15, Issue 22, p5449
- ISSN
2072-6694
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.3390/cancers15225449