The mechanisms by which cytoplasmic cargoes such as RNAs are incorporated into extracellular vesicles (EVs) are poorly understood. In a recent article published in Developmental Cell, we describe a novel function of endoplasmic reticulum membrane contact sites (ER MCS) in regulating biogenesis of RNA-containing EVs (Barman et al., 2022). We identified the ER MCS tether protein VAP-A and the ceramide transporter CERT as key drivers of this process. VAP-A depletion and overexpression produced corresponding changes in the overall number and RNA content of secreted EVs. Further sub-fractionation of small EVs from VAP-A depleted cells revealed a distinct loss in a specific subset of dense, RNA-loaded small EVs that are critical for the transfer of miR-100 to recipient cells. Cell imaging data confirmed the loss of RNA and RNA binding proteins (RBPs) in VAP-A-knockdown multivesicular bodies. Lipid analysis of VAP-A-knockdown EVs revealed decreases in ceramides, which are known to affect EV biogenesis. Depletion of the ceramide transfer protein CERT, which interacts with its binding partner VAP-A at ER MCS, leads to similar defects in EV number and RNA content as VAP-A-knockdown. These data suggest a model for ER MCS as platforms for biogenesis of a key EV population via ceramide transfer and RNA loading.
Keywords: CERT; Endoplasmic reticulum; RNA; VAP-A; ceramide; exosomes; extracellular vesicles.