| Literature DB >> 25729563 |
Muthuvel Jayachandran1, Ghiara Lugo2, Hillary Heiling2, Virginia M Miller1, Andrew D Rule3, John C Lieske4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The lifetime incidence of kidney stones is about two times greater in men compared to women. Extracellular vesicles (EVs) shed from activated cells are present in the urine and may reflect or even mediate renal physiology and/or pathology. This study was designed to standardize methodology to characterize urinary EVs by digital flow cytometry and to identify possible sex differences in EVs in persons with and without their first symptomatic kidney stones.Entities:
Keywords: Exosomes; Flow cytometry; Microparticles; Microvesicles; Sex differences; Urinary vesicles; Vesicles
Year: 2015 PMID: 25729563 PMCID: PMC4345020 DOI: 10.1186/s13293-015-0021-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biol Sex Differ ISSN: 2042-6410 Impact factor: 5.027
Figure 1Biogenesis of EVs (~0.1–1 μm in size; microvesicles from plasma membrane and exosomes (~30–100 nm) from multivesicular body) from cells during physiological and pathological condition. Abbreviations: PC phosphatidylcholine, SM sphingomyelin, PS phosphatidylserine, PE phosphatidylethanolamine.
Figure 2Representative transmission electron microscopy of urinary EVs isolated by high-speed centrifugation. Arrow heads indicate membranes; lower (A) and higher (B) magnification of heterogeneous population of urinary EVs.
Figure 3Representative typical scatter plots (A–C) and fluorescence dot (quadrants) plots (D–F) from FACSCanto™ flow cytometry, respectively. (A) Control gates of buffer with fluorophore-conjugated antibodies and calibration beads. (B) Gates derived from diluted urine plus appropriate fluorophore-conjugated antibodies and calibration beads from one individual. (C) Gates derived from diluted urine plus appropriate fluorophore-conjugated antibodies and calibration beads from another individual. (D) Fluorescent dot plot (quadrants derived from microvesicle gate of Figure 3B) showing fluorophore spectra separate of annexin-V and P-selectin (activated platelet specific protein, irrelevant antibody control used for urine EV analysis). A similar pattern was observed with isotype control (fluorophore conjugated IgG) antibodies in diluted urine samples (data not shown). (E) Fluorescent dot plot (quadrants derived from microvesicle gate of Figure 3B) showing fluorophore spectra separate of annexin-V and CD9 antibody. (F) Fluorescent dot plot (quadrants derived from microvesicle gate of Figure 3B) showing fluorophore spectra separate of annexin-V and aquaporin-2 (a specific marker for collecting duct cell-derived EVs) fluorophore-positive (+) and fluorophore-negative (−) EVs. Similar fluorescent dot plots were obtained from diluted urine stained with specific antibodies for cells of the urinary tract (Figure 4, data not shown).
Figure 4Specific markers were used to identify EVs derived from cells of different segments of the nephron and renal pelvis. All indicated markers were used in this study but only data of EVs positive for one or two markers of each cell type were presented in this manuscript.
Figure 5Podocyte markers displaying high intra-individual correlation. The upper left is the correlation of two different fluorophores conjugated to annexin-V and binding to surface phosphatidylserine on EVs from the same urine sample. The upper middle is the correlation of two distinct antibodies for the same cell-specific antigens (e.g., podocytes) binding to urinary EVs from the same urine sample. The upper right shows that annexin-V-positive vesicles did not correlate with urine osmolality. There were also no differences in the concentration of annexin-V- (lower left) and exosome marker (CD63, lower right)-positive EVs between two different 24-h urine collections obtained within 3 months from the same individuals.
Total number of phosphatidylserine, exosome, and inflammatory markers positive for urinary EVs
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| Urinary EV/mg creatinine | ||||
| Total phosphatidylserine positive | 3,181 (1,144, 6,072) | 697* (243, 1,158) | 3,068 (1,143, 6,166) | 1,416† (515, 3,435) |
| Total CD63 (exosome) positive | 911 (528, 1,258) | 185* (86, 580) | 2,308† (525, 5,637) | 1,062*† (267, 2,628) |
| Cellular adhesion/inflammatory molecules positive for urinary EV/mg creatinine | ||||
| Total E-cadherin positive | 6 (2, 21) | 5 (2, 9) | 7 (2, 17) | 4 (2, 9) |
| Total ICAM-1 positive | 184 (106, 320) | 160 (33, 657) | 204 (93, 627) | 163 (43, 627) |
| Total VCAM-1 positive | 720 (133, 1,708) | 48* (6, 215) | 46† (15, 198) | 35 (6, 206) |
| Total tissue factor positive | 494 (214, 1,012) | 204* (67, 667) | 611 (241, 2,063) | 421 (115, 1,962) |
| Total MCP-1 positive | 20 (5, 36) | 3* (2, 6) | 8 (3, 16) | 3* (1, 8) |
Data are presented as median (25th, 75th percentile) × 103/mg creatinine and analyzed by ANOVA followed by Student’s t test/Wilcoxon/Kruskal-Wallis (rank sums) test. *P < 0.05 between men and women of the same group; † P < 0.05 between control and stone formers of the same sex.
Numbers of urinary EVs from epithelial cells of different segments of nephron and urinary tract
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| Glomerulus | Podocin + galectin-1 positive | 2,708 (1,037, 4,059) | 24* (6, 183) | 225† (77, 292) | 20* (7, 91) |
| Bowman’s capsule | Claudin-1 positive | 96 (51, 322) | 11* (8, 26) | 11† (4, 17) | 14 (6, 35) |
| Proximal tubule | URAT1 positive | 367 (195, 1,223) | 39* (18, 61) | 36† (20, 74) | 30 (21, 50) |
| Thin loop of Henle | SLC14A2 positive | 182 (76, 544) | 5* (3, 23) | 11† (6, 18) | 9 (4, 50) |
| Thick loop of Henle | Uromodulin positive | 21,960 (7,423, 46,782) | 1,033* (236, 3,389) | 2,652† (482, 5,031) | 1,458 (302, 4,558) |
| Distal tubule | SLC12A3 positive | 611 (93, 1,459) | 28* (14, 48) | 24† (8, 50) | 15 (7, 42) |
| Collecting duct | V-ATPase positive | 57 (11, 220) | 16* (7, 23) | 12† (5, 46) | 11 (4, 30) |
| Renal pelvis | Cytokeratin 19 positive | 99 (51, 225) | 21* (2, 37) | 16† (9, 25) | 9 (6, 16) |
| Urinary bladder | Neprilysin positive | 2,320 (1,308, 3,170) | 222* (112, 427) | 243† (121, 382) | 252 (126, 593) |
Data are presented as median (25th, 75th percentile) × 103/mg creatinine and analyzed by ANOVA followed by Student’s t test/Wilcoxon/Kruskal-Wallis (rank sums) test. *P < 0.05 between men and women of the same group; † P < 0.05 between control and stone formers of the same sex.
Clinical characteristics, blood, and urine biochemistry of study participants
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| Clinical characteristics | ||||
| Age (years) | 44 ± 12 | 42 ± 12 | 41 ± 16 | 51 ± 14*† |
| Body mass index (kg/m2) | 28 ± 7 ( | 28 ± 5 ( | 28 ± 8 ( | 31 ± 7 ( |
| Serum calcium (mg/dL) | 9.5 ± 0.5 ( | 9.1 ± 1.7 ( | 9.5 ± 0.5 ( | 8.9 ± 2.3 ( |
| Serum creatinine (mg/dL) | 0.70 ± 0.1 ( | 0.96 ± 0.2* ( | 0.73 ± 0.1 ( | 0.98 ± 0.2* ( |
| Serum uric acid (mg/dL) | 4.4 ± 1.2 ( | 6.0 ± 1.2* ( | 4.7 ± 1.0 ( | 6.4 ± 1.4* ( |
| Serum phosphate (mg/dL) | 3.5 ± 0.5 ( | 3.4 ± 0.4 ( | 3.7 ± 0.6† ( | 3.4 ± 0.6* ( |
| Urine biochemistry | ||||
| pH | 6.3 ± 0.5 | 6.2 ± 0.6 | 6.2 ± 0.5 | 6.0 ± 0.6 |
| Osmolality (mOsm) | 623 ± 272 | 664 ± 224 | 539 ± 238 | 689 ± 214* |
| Urine volume (mL/24 h) | 1,613 ± 742 | 1,955 ± 732 | 1,864 ± 920 | 1,675 ± 655 |
| Albumin (mg/24 h) | 5 ± 13 | 1.3 ± 3 | 4 ± 6 | 6 ± 8† |
| Protein (mg/24 h) | 12 ± 16 | 25 ± 19* | 25 ± 16† | 30 ± 22 |
| Creatinine (mg/24 h) | 844 ± 207 | 1,615 ± 618* | 836 ± 302 | 1,309 ± 628*† |
| Sodium (mmol/24 h) | 108 ± 47 | 180 ± 73* | 106 ± 40 | 146 ± 73*† |
| Potassium (mmol/24 h) | 49 ± 27 | 77 ± 31* | 40 ± 21 | 53 ± 27*† |
| Magnesium (mg/24 h) | 108 ± 54 | 155 ± 81* | 89 ± 43 | 122 ± 63*† |
| Calcium (mg/24 h) | 202 ± 81 | 214 ± 126 | 175 ± 98 | 210 ± 124 |
| Oxalate (mg/24 h) | 22 ± 8.6 | 29 ± 15 | 19 ± 11 | 24 ± 21 |
| Phosphate (mg/24 h) | 645 ± 253 | 965 ± 468* | 581 ± 236 | 822 ± 414* |
| Uric acid (mg/24 h) | 352 ± 138 | 599 ± 223* | 373 ± 160 | 447 ± 226† |
| Citrate (mg/24 h) | 646 ± 238 | 637 ± 370 | 526 ± 281 | 535 ± 314 |
Data are presented as mean ± SD and were analyzed by ANOVA followed by Student’s t test. *P < 0.05 between men and women of the same group; † P < 0.05 between control and stone formers of the same sex.