The CRISPR/Cas system has been developed
as a potent tool for genome engineering and transcription regulation.
However, the efficiency of the delivery of the system into cells,
particularly for therapeutic in vivo applications,
remains a major bottleneck. Extracellular vesicles (EVs), released
by eukaryotic cells, can mediate the transfer of various molecules,
including nucleic acids and proteins. We show the packaging and delivery
of the CRISPR/Cas system via EVs to the target cells, combining the
advantages of both technological platforms. A genome editing with
designed extracellular vesicles (GEDEX) system generated by the producer
cells can transfer the designed transcriptional regulator dCas9-VPR
complexed with appropriate targeting gRNAs enabling activation of
gene transcription. We show functional delivery in mammalian cells
as well in the animals. The therapeutic efficiency of in vivo delivery of dCas9-VPR/sgRNA GEDEX is demonstrated in a mouse model
of liver damage counteracted by upregulation of the endogenous hepatocyte
growth factor, demonstrating the potential for therapeutic applications.
Urinary bladder cancer is often multifocal; however, the intraluminal dissemination of the urothelial cancer cells is poorly understood. The involvement of N-cadherin in the adhesion of the cancer urothelial cells to the urothelium had not previously been studied. Therefore, we herein explore the possibility of the intraluminal dissemination of the urothelial cancer cells by evaluating the role of classical cadherins in the adhesion of urothelial cancer cells to the urothelium. We used E-cadherin negative T24 cells and established a T24 Ncadlow cell line with an additionally decreased expression of N-cadherin in the plasma membrane and a decreased secretion of proform of metalloproteinase 2. The labelled T24 and T24 Ncadlow cells were seeded onto urothelial in vitro models. After 24 h in co-culture, unattached cancer cells were rinsed and urothelia with attached cancer urothelial cells were processed for fluorescence and electron microscopy. Both the T24 and T24 Ncadlow cells attached to the urothelium, yet only to the uroplakin-negative urothelial cells. The ultrastructural analysis showed that T24 and T24 Ncadlow cells adhere to poorly differentiated urothelial cells by desmosomes. To achieve this, they first disrupt tight junctions of superficial urothelial cells. This study indicates that the lack of E-cadherin expression and decreased expression of N-cadherin in the plasma membrane of T24 cells does not interfere with their adhesion to the urothelium; therefore, our results suggest that intraluminal dissemination of cancer urothelial cells along the urothelium occurs on uroplakin-negative cells and is desmosome-mediated.
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