Molecular Determinants for RNA Release into Extracellular Vesicles

2021 
Extracellular vesicles (EVs) are important for intercellular communication and act as vehicles for biological material, such as various classes of coding and non-coding RNAs, a few of which were shown to selectively target into vesicles. However, protein factors, mechanisms, and sequence elements contributing to this specificity remain largely elusive. Here, we use a reporter system that results in different types of modified transcripts to decipher the specificity determinants of RNAs released into EVs. First, we found that small RNAs are more efficiently packaged into EVs than large ones, and second, we determined absolute quantities for several endogenous RNA transcripts in EVs (U6 snRNA, U1 snRNA, Y1 RNA, and GAPDH mRNA). We show that RNA polymerase III (pol III) transcripts are more efficiently secreted into EVs compared to pol II-derived transcripts. Surprisingly, our quantitative analysis revealed no RNA accumulation in the vesicles relative to the total cellular levels, based on both overexpressed reporter transcripts and endogenous RNAs. RNA appears to be EV-associated only at low copy numbers, ranging between 0.02 and 1 molecule per EV. This RNA association may reflect internal EV encapsulation or a less tightly bound state at the vesicle surface.
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