| Literature DB >> 28912498 |
Giulia Corso1, Imre Mäger2,3, Yi Lee1, André Görgens1,4, Jarred Bultema5, Bernd Giebel4, Matthew J A Wood2,6, Joel Z Nordin7,8, Samir El Andaloussi9,10,11.
Abstract
Extracellular vesicles (EVs) play a pivotal role in cell-to-cell communication and have been shown to take part in several physiological and pathological processes. EVs have traditionally been purified by ultracentrifugation (UC), however UC has limitations, including resulting in, operator-dependant yields, EV aggregation and altered EV morphology, and moreover is time consuming. Here we show that commercially available bind-elute size exclusion chromatography (BE-SEC) columns purify EVs with high yield (recovery ~ 80%) in a time-efficient manner compared to current methodologies. This technique is reproducible and scalable, and surface marker analysis by bead-based flow cytometry revealed highly similar expression signatures compared with UC-purified samples. Furthermore, uptake of eGFP labelled EVs in recipient cells was comparable between BE-SEC and UC samples. Hence, the BE-SEC based EV purification method represents an important methodological advance likely to facilitate robust and reproducible studies of EV biology and therapeutic application.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28912498 PMCID: PMC5599601 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-10646-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Characterization of neuroblastoma (N2a) and myoblast (C2C12) cell culture derived-EVs isolated with the BE-SEC column. (A) Schematic overview of the workflow. Processed CM was concentrated and loaded onto a BE-SEC column using the ÄKTA chromatography system. The first eluting fraction (EVs) was collected and subsequently concentrated and analysed. Contaminants that were trapped by the resin were eluted during the column wash (CIP) performed with 1 M NaOH in 30% isopropanol. (B,C) Representative particle concentrations and average size distributions of EVs derived from mouse N2a and C2C12 cell lines (n = 3). To assess the reproducibility of the method, the particle concentration (D) and the mode size (E) of independent experiments (n = 6) were plotted. (F) Western blotting analysis of BE-SEC purified vesicles derived from N2a and C2C12 (1 × 1010 particles loaded per well) was performed in duplicate. Full-length blots can be found in Supplementary Fig. 1. (G) TEM images of BE-SEC isolated EVs showing a wide field (left panel, scale bar 1 µm) and a close-up/zoomed-in picture (right panel, scale bar 200 nm). White triangles label EVs.
Particles/µg of proteins.
| N2a | C2C12 | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean | SD | Mean | SD | |
| CM | 5.65e + 07 | 4.98e + 06 | 1.64e + 07 | 3.03e + 06 |
| BE-SEC | 2.05e + 09 | 5.89e + 08 | 2.10e + 09 | 1.88e + 08 |
| UC | 2.96e + 09 | 8.24e + 08 | 2.99e + 09 | 4.84e + 08 |
Purity index of vesicles in CM, BE-SEC and UC samples.
Figure 2Validating the performance of TFF/BE-SEC in scaled-up experiments. (A) NTA analysis of TFF/BE-SEC N2a derived EVs isolated from different media volumes. (B) To assess the scalability, the total number of isolated particles was plotted against the different CM volumes tested. (C) Mode size (dots) and the particle concentration (triangles) of independent experiments (n = 5) were plotted to validate the reproducibility of the scaled-up samples. (D) Left, wide-field and right, close-up electron microscopy pictures of TFF/BE-SEC isolated EVs (white triangles pointing at EVs, scale bars left 1 µm and right 200 nm). (E) Total protein staining of cell lysate (TCL), TFF and TFF/BE-SEC samples. (F) WB analysis of N2a cells and N2a EVs (1 × 1010 particles per well) isolated with TFF (300 kDa and 100 kDa cut-off) and TFF/BE-SEC (TFF: Tangential Flow Filtration, TFF/BE-SEC: Tangential Flow Filtration coupled with bind-elute size exclusion chromatography). Full-length blots can be found in Supplementary Fig. 3.
Particles/µg of proteins in CM, TFF and concentrated TFF/BE-SEC samples.
| N2a | ||
|---|---|---|
| Mean | SD | |
| CM | 2.32e + 07 | 4.95e + 05 |
| TFF 100 | 4.50e + 08 | 2.24e + 08 |
| TFF 100/BE-SEC | 2.85e + 09 | 4.92e + 08 |
| TFF 300 | 7.66e + 08 | 3.81e + 08 |
| TFF 300/BE-SEC | 3.25e + 09 | 3.20e + 08 |
Figure 3Depletion of non-vesicular proteins and RNAs. SEC analysis shows that non-vesicular proteins (A–C) and RNAs fraction (B–D) present in the TFF samples, are removed by the BE-SEC column (TFF100 or TFF300: Tangential Flow Filtration using 100 kDa or 300 kDa cut-off filters, TFF100/BE-SEC or TFF300/BE-SEC: Tangential Flow Filtration followed by bind-elute size exclusion chromatography).
Figure 4EV surface protein profile and EV uptake analysis by flow cytometry. (A) Signal intensity of respective bead populations normalized to the EV markers CD81/CD9/CD63. (B) NTA total particle count of scatter and fluorescent EVs isolated with UC and TFF/BE-SEC. (C) Mean fluorescence intensity normalized over the control (∆MFI) comparing the two isolation methods (n = 2). (D) Representative overlaid histograms of UC and TFF/BE-SEC isolated EVs uptake assay on recipient Huh7 cells, compared to untreated Huh7 cells (UT).