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Role of extracellular vesicles in chronic lung disease.pdf (1.8 MB)

Role of extracellular vesicles in chronic lung disease

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journal contribution
posted on 2022-06-23, 15:37 authored by Anne Trappe, Seamas C Donnelly, Paul McNallyPaul McNally, Judith CoppingerJudith Coppinger
To explore the role of extracellular vesicles (EVs) in chronic lung diseases. EVs are emerging as mediators of intercellular communication and possible diagnostic markers of disease. EVs harbour cargo molecules including RNA, lipids and proteins that they transfer to recipient cells. EVs are intercellular communicators within the lung microenvironment. Due to their disease-specific cargoes, EVs have the promise to be all-in-one complex multimodal biomarkers. EVs also have potential as drug carriers in chronic lung disease. Descriptive discussion of key studies of EVs as contributors to disease pathology, as biomarkers and as potential therapies with a focus on chronic obstructive pulmonary disorder (COPD), cystic fibrosis (CF), asthma, idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis and lung cancer. We provide a broad overview of the roles of EV in chronic respiratory disease. Recent advances in profiling EVs have shown their potential as biomarker candidates. Further studies have provided insight into their disease pathology, particularly in inflammatory processes across a spectrum of lung diseases. EVs are on the horizon as new modes of drug delivery and as therapies themselves in cell-based therapeutics. EVs are relatively untapped sources of information in the clinic that can help further detail the full translational nature of chronic lung disorders.

Funding

The National Children’s Research Centre under Project Grant No C/17/3

History

Comments

The original article is available at https://thorax.bmj.com/

Published Citation

Trappe A, Donnelly SC, McNally P, Coppinger JA. Role of extracellular vesicles in chronic lung disease. Thorax. 2021;76(10):1047-1056

Publication Date

12 March 2021

PubMed ID

33712504

Department/Unit

  • Paediatrics
  • School of Pharmacy and Biomolecular Sciences

Research Area

  • Cancer
  • Immunity, Infection and Inflammation
  • Respiratory Medicine

Publisher

BMJ

Version

  • Published Version (Version of Record)