Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://ahro.austin.org.au/austinjspui/handle/1/17647
Title: The contribution of tumour-derived exosomes to the hallmarks of cancer.
Austin Authors: Meehan, Katie;Vella, Laura J
Affiliation: School of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, University of Western Australia, Crawley, Australia
Olivia Newton-John Cancer Research Institute, Heidelberg, Victoria, Australia
Issue Date: 2016
Date: 2015-10-19
Publication information: Critical reviews in clinical laboratory sciences 2016; 53(2): 121-131
Abstract: Exosomes are small, biologically active extracellular vesicles and over the last decade, both stromal and tumour-derived exosomes (TDE) have been implicated in cancer onset, progression and metastases. Cancer is a complex disease that is underpinned by several "cancer hallmarks", originally described by Hanahan and Weinberg in 2000 and then revised in 2011. The hallmarks of cancer comprise six biological capabilities, along with two emerging hallmarks and two enabling characteristics that facilitate tumour growth and metastatic dissemination. Ample evidence supports a clear role for TDE in four of the original biological hallmarks (sustaining proliferative signalling, resisting cell death, inducing angiogenesis and activating invasion and metastases). A less-defined role exists for TDE in evading growth suppressors, and currently, there is no evidence to suggest a role for TDE in enabling replicative immortality. TDE are intimately involved in the newly defined hallmarks of cancer and enabling characteristics, most evidently in immune inhibition and tumour-promoting inflammation, which ultimately enable escape from immune destruction and tumour progression. Herein, we discuss the role of TDE in the context of the hallmarks and enabling characteristics of cancer as defined by Hanahan and Weinberg.
URI: https://ahro.austin.org.au/austinjspui/handle/1/17647
DOI: 10.3109/10408363.2015.1092496
Journal: Critical reviews in clinical laboratory sciences
PubMed URL: 26479834
Type: Journal Article
Subjects: Cancer hallmarks
Exosomes
extracellular vesicles
intercellular signalling
invasion
Metastasis
Microenvironment
Proliferation
Appears in Collections:Journal articles

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