Molecular lipid species in urinary exosomes as potential prostate cancer biomarkers.

Eur J Cancer

Department of Molecular Cell Biology, Institute for Cancer Research, Oslo University Hospital-The Norwegian Radium Hospital, 0379 Oslo, Norway; Centre for Cancer Biomedicine, Faculty of Medicine, University of Oslo, 0379 Oslo, Norway. Electronic address:

Published: January 2017

AI Article Synopsis

  • Exosomes from prostate cancer patients could serve as noninvasive biomarkers since they carry cancer cell molecules detectable in urine.
  • A comprehensive lipid analysis identified 107 lipid species in urinary exosomes, finding significant differences between cancer patients and healthy controls, particularly in phosphatidylserine and lactosylceramide.
  • The study highlights the potential of specific lipid combinations to distinguish between prostate cancer patients and healthy individuals with high sensitivity and specificity, indicating a promising direction for cancer biomarker research.

Article Abstract

Background: Exosomes have recently appeared as a novel source of noninvasive cancer biomarkers, since these nanovesicles contain molecules from cancer cells and can be detected in biofluids. We have here investigated the potential use of lipids in urinary exosomes as prostate cancer biomarkers.

Methods: A high-throughput mass spectrometry quantitative lipidomic analysis was performed to reveal the lipid composition of urinary exosomes in prostate cancer patients and healthy controls.

Results: Control samples were first analysed to characterise the lipidome of urinary exosomes and test the reproducibility of the method. In total, 107 lipid species were quantified in urinary exosomes. Several differences, for example, in cholesterol and phosphatidylcholine, were found between urinary exosomes and exosomes derived from cell lines, thus showing the importance of in vivo studies for biomarker analysis. The 36 most abundant lipid species in urinary exosomes were then quantified in 15 prostate cancer patients and 13 healthy controls. Interestingly, the levels of nine lipids species were found to be significantly different when the two groups were compared. The highest significance was shown for phosphatidylserine (PS) 18:1/18:1 and lactosylceramide (d18:1/16:0), the latter also showed the highest patient-to-control ratio. Furthermore, combinations of these lipid species and PS 18:0-18:2 distinguished the two groups with 93% sensitivity and 100% specificity. Finally, in agreement with the reported dysregulation of sphingolipid metabolism in cancer cells, alteration in specific sphingolipid lipid classes were observed.

Conclusion: This study shows for the first time the potential use of exosomal lipid species in urine as prostate cancer biomarkers.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ejca.2016.10.011DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

urinary exosomes
28
lipid species
20
prostate cancer
20
cancer biomarkers
12
exosomes
9
species urinary
8
cancer
8
cancer cells
8
exosomes prostate
8
cancer patients
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!