Selective isolation of extracellular vesicles from minimally processed human plasma as a translational strategy for liquid biopsies
Metadata
Show full item recordEditorial
BMC
Materia
Extracellular vesicle Immunoprecipitation Liquid biopsy Enrichment Platelet Plasma Early-stage cancer
Date
2022-08-07Referencia bibliográfica
Fortunato, D... [et al.]. Selective isolation of extracellular vesicles from minimally processed human plasma as a translational strategy for liquid biopsies. Biomark Res 10, 57 (2022). [https://doi.org/10.1186/s40364-022-00404-1]
Sponsorship
European Commission 765492 952183Abstract
Background: Intercellular communication is mediated by extracellular vesicles (EVs), as they enclose selectively
packaged biomolecules that can be horizontally transferred from donor to recipient cells. Because all cells constantly
generate and recycle EVs, they provide accurate timed snapshots of individual pathophysiological status. Since blood
plasma circulates through the whole body, it is often the biofluid of choice for biomarker detection in EVs. Blood
collection is easy and minimally invasive, yet reproducible procedures to obtain pure EV samples from circulating
biofluids are still lacking. Here, we addressed central aspects of EV immunoaffinity isolation from simple and complex
matrices, such as plasma.
Methods: Cell-generated EV spike-in models were isolated and purified by size-exclusion chromatography, stained
with cellular dyes and characterized by nano flow cytometry. Fluorescently-labelled spike-in EVs emerged as reliable,
high-throughput and easily measurable readouts, which were employed to optimize our EV immunoprecipitation
strategy and evaluate its performance. Plasma-derived EVs were captured and detected using this straightforward
protocol, sequentially combining isolation and staining of specific surface markers, such as CD9 or CD41. Multiplexed
digital transcript detection data was generated using the Nanostring nCounter platform and evaluated through a
dedicated bioinformatics pipeline.
Results: Beads with covalently-conjugated antibodies on their surface outperformed streptavidin-conjugated beads,
coated with biotinylated antibodies, in EV immunoprecipitation. Fluorescent EV spike recovery evidenced that target
EV subpopulations can be efficiently retrieved from plasma, and that their enrichment is dependent not only on
complex matrix composition, but also on the EV surface phenotype. Finally, mRNA profiling experiments proved that
distinct EV subpopulations can be captured by directly targeting different surface markers. Furthermore, EVs isolated
with anti-CD61 beads enclosed mRNA expression patterns that might be associated to early-stage lung cancer, in
contrast with EVs captured through CD9, CD63 or CD81. The differential clinical value carried within each distinct EV
subset highlights the advantages of selective isolation.
Conclusions: This EV isolation protocol facilitated the extraction of clinically useful information from plasma. Compatible
with common downstream analytics, it is a readily implementable research tool, tailored to provide a truly
translational solution in routine clinical workflows, fostering the inclusion of EVs in novel liquid biopsy settings.