Exosomal miRNAs and breast cancer: A complex theranostics interlink with clinical significance.
Sayantanee MukherjeeRajib DharSwathi JonnalagaddaSukhamoy GoraiSagnik NagRishav KarNobendu MukherjeeDattatreya MukherjeeRishabh VatsaArikketh DeviKrishnan AnandRohit GundamarajuSaurabh Kumar JhaAthanasios AlexiouMarios PapadakisPublished in: Biomarkers : biochemical indicators of exposure, response, and susceptibility to chemicals (2023)
Breast cancer (BC) remains the most challenging global health crisis of the current decade, impacting a large population of females annually. In the field of cancer research, the discovery of extracellular vesicles (EVs), specifically exosomes (a subpopulation of EVs), has marked a significant milestone. In general, exosomes are released from all active cells but tumor cell-derived exosomes (TDXs) have a great impact (TDXs miRNAs, proteins, lipid molecules) on cancer development and progression. TDXs regulate multiple events in breast cancer such as tumor microenvironment remodeling, immune cell suppression, angiogenesis, metastasis (EMT-epithelial mesenchymal transition, organ-specific metastasis), and therapeutic resistance. In BC, early detection is the most challenging event, exosome-based BC screening solved the problem. Exosome-based BC treatment is a sign of the transforming era of liquid biopsy. It is also a promising therapeutic tool for breast cancer. Exosome research goes to closer precision oncology via a single exosome profiling approach. Our hope is that this review will serve as motivation for researchers to explore the field of exosomes and develop an efficient, and affordable theranostics approach for breast cancer.