Hypoxia is an essential hallmark of several serious diseases such as cardiovascular and metabolic disorders and cancer. A decline in the tissue oxygen level induces hypoxic responses in cells which strive to adapt to the changed conditions. A failure to adapt to prolonged or severe hypoxia can trigger cell death. While some cell types, such as neurons, are highly vulnerable to hypoxia, cancer cells take advantage of a hypoxic environment to undergo tumour growth, angiogenesis and metastasis. Hypoxia‐induced processes trigger complex intercellular communication and there are now indications that extracellular vesicles (EVs) play a fundamental role in these processes. Recent developments in EV isolation and characterization methodology have increased the awareness of the importance of EV purity in functional and cargo studies. Cell death, a hallmark of severe hypoxia, is a known source of intracellular contaminants in isolated EVs. In this review, methodological aspects of studies investigating hypoxia‐induced EVs are critically evaluated. Key concerns and gaps in the current knowledge are highlighted and future directions for studies are set. To accelerate and advance research, an in‐depth analysis of the functions and cargo of hypoxic EVs, compared to normoxic EVs, is provided with the focus on the altered microRNA contents of the EVs.
Hypoxia induces changes in the secretion of extracellular vesicles (EVs) in several non‐neuronal cells and pathological conditions. EVs are packed with biomolecules, such as microRNA(miR)‐21‐5p, which respond to hypoxia. However, the true EV association of miR‐21‐5p, and its functional or biomarker relevance, are inadequately characterised. Neurons are extremely sensitive cells, and it is not known whether the secretion of neuronal EVs and miR‐21‐5p are altered upon hypoxia. Here, we characterised the temporal EV secretion profile and cell viability of neurons under hypoxia. Hypoxia induced a rapid increase of miR‐21a‐5p secretion in the EVs, which preceded the elevation of hypoxia‐induced tissue or cellular miR‐21a‐5p. Prolonged hypoxia induced cell death and the release of morphologically distinct EVs. The EVs protected miR‐21a‐5p from enzymatic degradation but a remarkable fraction of miR‐21a‐5p remained fragile and non‐EV associated. The increase in miR‐21a‐5p secretion may have biomarker potential, as high blood levels of miR‐21‐5p in stroke patients were associated with significant disability at hospital discharge. Our data provides an understanding of the dynamic regulation of EV secretion from neurons under hypoxia and provides a candidate for the prediction of recovery from ischemic stroke.
Next-generation sequencing (NGS) has been increasingly used in a wide range of research communities and in routine clinical practice and leads to an ever increasing amount of sequencing data. Sequencing data comes with, several challenges such as sharing, storing, integrating, analyzing, and interpretion. The management of the expanding amount of data is challenging and, especially for human omics data, privacy protection is crucial. Unraveling the causes of rare diseases is critically dependent on data sharing, but progress is hampered by regulations and privacy concerns. To overcome the concerns associated with centralized human genomic data storage, we developed a federated analysis platform, referred to as Widely Integrated NGS (WiNGS). The presented approach enables datasharing and combined data-analysis of omics data across a consortium without a centralized data store. Moreover, the platform incorporates extensive variant interpretation tools from genotype to phenotype for the diagnosis of rare developmental disorders.
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