Extracellular vesicles: signaling mechanisms and therapeutic engineering

Paoli Calmettes Institute

Extracellular vesicles: signaling mechanisms and therapeutic engineering

Paoli Calmettes Institute

Our team aims to elucidate little-known signaling mechanisms, assess their role in cancer, and propose innovative therapeutic approaches.

In particular, we analyze how scaffolding molecules such as heparan sulfate-chain proteoglycans and PDZ-domain proteins influence the biology of extracellular vesicles (EVs).

EVs, small organelles with a lipid bilayer, play a crucial role in intercellular communication and theorganization of the extracellular matrix. The mechanisms governing their exchange are still poorly understood. We have cloned the PDZ protein syntenin and shown that it controls the biogenesis, loading and capture of EVs with its major partners, syndecans.

We have also demonstrated that PDZ proteins form complex networks with syndecans, influencing EV trafficking. Recently, we have developed pharmacological inhibitors of syntenin-syndecan interaction, and demonstrated their efficacy in limiting the loading of VEs with pro-oncogenic factors.

We have also patented a technology enabling the production of functionalized EVs, thanks in particular to a genetic approach enabling us to add "addresses" to their surface while loading bio-drugs inside.

Research areas

  1. Fundamental research
  • EV capture and signaling mechanisms.
  • Role of EVs in extracellular matrix degradation.
  • Role of syntenin in secretory autophagy
  1. Translational research
  • Therapeutic potential of pharmacological inhibition of syntenin in acute myeloid leukemia and multiple myeloma.
  • Impact of proteases on the activity of, and resistance to treatment with, Antibody-drug conjugates (ADC).
  1. Innovation
  • Optimization of extracellular vesicle engineering (synthetic biology approaches) for therapeutic purposes.

The projects

VE capture and signaling mechanisms
image by Rania Ghossoub project manager

PROJECT MANAGER

Rania Ghossoub

Project members :

Lauriane Goullieux

Eliane Jaafar

While interest in EVs has exploded in the biomedical sciences (as a source of biomarkers and for innovative therapies), our knowledge of the mechanisms by which EVs are formed, released and captured by cells is still very limited. Our previous studies have shown that syndecans function in the formation and capture of EVs, notably in coordination with tetraspanins and certain PDZ-domain proteins. We were able to establish that syndecan sugars and proteins must be cleaved to enable EV biogenesis, while uncleaved syndecans function in EV capture. Here, we aim to investigate the role of syndecan processing in EV trafficking, contact signaling, capture and cargo delivery.

Role of matrix metalloproteinases in VE-dependent matrix remodeling
image by Sylvie Thuault project manager

PROJECT MANAGER

Sylvie Thuault

Project member :

Marie Huber

Remodeling of the extracellular matrix (ECM) is essential for tumor progression. Secreted and transmembrane matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) are the main proteases controlling the degradation and activity of ECM components. They participate in the remodeling of the ECM, eliminating barriers and thus facilitating cell migration and invasion.

MMPs have been identified as components of EVs. However, the molecular mechanisms by which they load into EVs and the role of EV-associated MMPs in matrix invasion are poorly understood. Transmembrane MMPs have a PDZ-binding motif at the C-terminus of their intracellular domain. We are evaluating the impact of PDZ-domain proteins, including Syntenin, on the loading of transmembrane MMPs into EVs and on ECM degradation by EVs.

Role of syntenin in secretory autophagy
image by Cristóbal Cerda-Troncoso project manager

PROJECT MANAGER

Cristóbal Cerda-Troncoso

Project member :

Yohan Pialat

Secretory autophagy is secretion from endosomal compartments created (in part) using "autophagy proteins" or components also used in classical "degradative" autophagy (leading to cargo destruction). Secretory autophagy occurs when autophagic structures fuse with the plasma membrane instead of the lysosome. Thus, secretory autophagy includes EV secretion, but is not limited to EVs. For example, some cytokines are secreted from "autophagic" compartments but freely, i.e. not enclosed in EVs. Syntenin EV secretion from early/late endosomes, as far as we know, does not depend on proteins involved in autophagy. Here, we aim to determine whether and how syntenin regulates autophagy-dependent secretion.

Therapeutic potential of pharmacological inhibition of syntenin in acute myeloid leukemia and multiple myeloma
image by Raphaël Leblanc project manager

PROJECT MANAGER

Raphaël Leblanc

Project member :

Lauriane Goullieux

Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) has a 60% relapse rate after treatment, and its heterogeneity limits the efficacy of targeted therapies. Therapeutic failure is attributed to the persistence of leukemic stem cells (LSC), protected by bone marrow stromal cells (BMSC). Targeting BMSC/LSC (stroma/tumor) exchanges could improve treatment efficacy.

Our data suggest that in AML, syntenin expression is up-regulated in tumor cells and down-regulated in BMSCs. This project aims to elucidate how "low-syntenin" BMSCs and "high-syntenin" tumor cells influence AML strain, assess the role of syntenin in microenvironment remodeling, and evaluate the therapeutic potential of pharmacological inhibitors (developed in our lab and targeting PDZ2 involved in syndecan binding) of syntenin functions. This project will establish the role of syntenin in stroma-tumor communication and its relevance as a therapeutic target for preventing AML relapse.

In collaboration with the team of Prof. Eline MENU and Chenggong TU (PhD student) (HEIM - VUB, Brussels), we are also investigating the therapeutic potential of our syntenin inhibitors in the treatment of multiple myeloma.

Impact of proteases in resistance mechanisms to Antibody-drug conjugate (ADC)
image by Rania Ghossoub project manager

PROJECT MANAGER

Rania Ghossoub

Project member :

Clara Boeschlin

Colombe Maréchal

Antibody-drug conjugates (ADCs) are new treatments that have considerably improved cancer care. However, resistance mechanisms to ADCs are emerging, limiting their efficacy. This project explores protease inhibition as a strategy for enhancing ADC activity and overcoming resistance mechanisms.

This work is being carried out in collaboration with Dr Alexandre De Nonneville (Institut Paoli-Calmettes) and benefits from privileged access to a large cohort of patients at different stages of breast cancer (PerMED trial - IPC).

Optimizing extracellular vesicle engineering (synthetic biology approaches) for therapeutic purposes

PROJECT MANAGER

Lukas Hyka

Project member :

Sofie Meeussen

Here, we aim to clarify whether genetic and synthetic biology approaches, taking advantage of the mechanistic insights into EV-based signaling revealed by the laboratory, can aid the development of EV-based therapies.

In collaboration with the team of Prof. Elke DE BRUYNE and Michiel DE COSTER (PhD student) (HEIM - VUB, Brussels), we are investigating the potential of our modified EVs for the treatment of multiple myeloma. In collaboration with Patrick CHAMES' team (CRCM), we are developing nanobodies to enhance EV uptake by target cells.

Team news

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Featured publications

11/2023

Leblanc R, Ghossoub R, Goubard A, Castellano R, Fares J, Camoin L, Audebert S, Balzano M, Bou-Tayeh B, Fauriat C, Vey N, Garciaz S, Borg JP, Collette Y, Aurrand-Lions M, David G, Zimmermann P.

09/2023

Castro-Cruz M, Hyka L, Daaboul G, Leblanc R, Meeussen S, Lembo F, Oris A, Van Herck L, Granjeaud S, David G, Zimmermann P.

02/2021

Kashyap R, Balzano M, Lechat B, Lambaerts K, Egea-Jimenez AL, Lembo F, Fares J, Meeussen S, Kügler S, Roebroek A, David G, Zimmermann P.

11/2017

Imjeti NS, Menck K, Egea-Jimenez AL, Lecointre C, Lembo F, Bouguenina H, Badache A, Ghossoub R, David G, Roche S, Zimmermann P.

07/2016

Egea-Jimenez AL, Gallardo R, Garcia-Pino A, Ivarsson Y, Wawrzyniak AM, Kashyap R, Loris R, Schymkowitz J, Rousseau F, Zimmermann P.

03/2014

Ghossoub R, Lembo F, Rubio A, Gaillard CB, Bouchet J, Vitale N, Slavík J, Machala M, Zimmermann P.

Labels, Funding and Partners

Alumni

Like others, they were part of the team.
Thank you to all those who have contributed to CRCM's excellence and impact.

Naga Sailaja Imjeti
Post-Doc
currently Post-Doc at Medical Theoretical Center (MTZ),
Dresden, Germany
Frédérique Lembo
Engineer
currently Eureka Education - Concret'Paie
Pont-Saint-Martin, France
Rudra Kashyap
PhD student
Currently Team Leader at Exobiologics,
Belgium
Antonio Egea-Jimenez
Post-Doc
Currently Consejeria de Educacion,
Region de Murcia, Spain
Monica Castro-Cruz
PhD student and junior Post-Doc
currently Protein Biochemist at Cambrium,
Berlin, Germany

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