| Literature DB >> 30755672 |
Lina Antounians1,2, Areti Tzanetakis1,2, Ornella Pellerito1,2, Vincenzo D Catania1,2, Adrienne Sulistyo1,2, Louise Montalva1,2, Mark J McVey3, Augusto Zani4,5.
Abstract
Extracellular vesicles (EVs) derived from amniotic fluid stem cells (AFSCs) mediate anti-apoptotic, pro-angiogenic, and immune-modulatory effects in multiple disease models, such as skeletal muscle atrophy and Alport syndrome. A source of potential variability in EV biological functions is how EV are isolated from parent cells. Currently, a comparative study of different EV isolation strategies using conditioned medium from AFSCs is lacking. Herein, we examined different isolation strategies for AFSC-EVs, using common techniques based on differential sedimentation (ultracentrifugation), solubility (ExoQuick, Total Exosome Isolation Reagent, Exo-PREP), or size-exclusion chromatography (qEV). All techniques isolated AFSC-EVs with typical EV morphology and protein markers. In contrast, AFSC-EV size, protein content, and yield varied depending on the method of isolation. When equal volumes of the different AFSC-EV preparations were used as treatment in a model of lung epithelial injury, we observed a significant variation in how AFSC-EVs were able to protect against cell death. AFSC-EV enhancement of cell survival appeared to be dose dependent, and largely uninfluenced by variation in EV-size distributions, relative EV-purity, or their total protein content. The variation in EV-mediated cell survival obtained with different isolation strategies emphasizes the importance of testing alternative isolation techniques in order to maximize EV regenerative capacity.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30755672 PMCID: PMC6372651 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-38320-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Comparison of the Amniotic Fluid Stem Cell-Extracellular Vesicles (AFSC-EVs) isolation techniques employed in the present study.
| Technique | Manufacturer suggested amount | Method | Advantages | Disadvantages |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| UC | Regulated by centrifuge tube capacity | Pellet EVs at 100,000 g, after pre-clearing CM from cellular debris and live cells | High scalability (up to 32 mL when using Beckman Coulter rotor) | Inconsistent reproducibility across studies due to rotor size, UC time, speed and temperature |
| ExoQuick | 20% of CM | Reagent based methods that force precipitation of EVs out of solution due to water sequestration | Little processing time, but may require overnight incubation | Cost per preparation |
| TEIR | 50% of CM | |||
| Exo-PREP | 100% of CM | |||
| qEV | 500 µL of CM at a time, up to 4-time use | Sepharose beads in columns that fractionate CM based on gravity. | High yield of small size EV | Column clogs and requires rinsing with NaOH/PBS to ensure adequate flow-through rate |
UC: ultracentrifugation.
TEIR: Total Exosome Isolation Reagent.
CM: conditioned medium.
PBS: phosphate buffered saline.
Figure 1Comparison of EV morphology, size distribution, and yield with different isolation techniques. (a) Representative photos of AFSC-EV morphology analyzed by TEM; the two different magnifications highlight morphology of individual EVs at near fields (left column) and a population of EVs at far fields (right column) Scale bar = 200 nm. (UC = Ultracentrifugation; TEIR = Total Exosome Isolation Reagent). B: Representative plot of the average size distributions of AFSC-EVs isolated with the different techniques visualized using Nanoparticle Tracking Analysis. Data are representative of eight videos of AFSC-EV preparations. X-axis = size distribution (nm), y-axis = concentration (particles/ml). (c) Total particle yield calculated as the area under the curve from (b) of each AFSC-EV preparation.
Figure 2Comparison of AFSC-EV protein content and EV markers. (a) Protein quantification of AFSC-EV preparations using the Pierce Bradford assay. Data are shown as mean ± SD n = 3. No difference was found between preparations isolated with UC, ExoQuick and TEIR. AFSC-EV preparations isolated using qEV had lower protein content than those isolated using Exo-PREP (p < 0.05). (b) Correlation analysis between total number of particles analyzed with Nanoparticle Tracking Analysis (Fig. 1c) and EV protein concentration (μg/μL) in each preparation of AFSC-EVs obtained by different isolation techniques [p = 0.25, r = 0.6 (95% CI −0.56 to 0.97)]. (c) Expression of canonical EV markers Hsp70, CD63, Flotillin-1, and TSG101 obtained by Western blot analysis for the different isolation techniques. All AFSC-EV isolation techniques showed no evidence of residual cellular debris, as evidenced by a lack of H3K27me3 protein expression. AFSCs (parent cells) and AFSC-conditioned medium (AFSC-CM; the initial starting material from which all techniques were derived), are shown as positive controls. Representative photo from n = 3 replicate analyses.
Figure 3Regenerative capacity of AFSC-EVs isolated using different techniques in an in vitro model of lung injury. (a) Death rate of A549 cells in different conditions (Y axis). Compared to control (black bar), the rate of cell death increased with the administration of nitrofen (nitrofen group, white bar, p < 0.0001). The rate of cell death was brought back to normal levels by the administration of AFSC-conditioned medium (AFSC-CM, purple bar; p = 0.01 vs. nitrofen group; p = n.s. vs. control), ultracentrifuged AFSC-EVs (UC, red bar; p < 0.05 vs. nitrofen group; p = n.s. vs. control), ExoQuick AFSC-EVs (yellow bar; p < 0.01 vs. nitrofen group; p = n.s. vs. control), Exo-PREP AFSC-EVs (green bar; p < 0.001 vs. nitrofen group; p = n.s. vs. control). Conversely, the rate of cell death was not rescued using the supernatant of the ultracentrifuged CM (EV-depleted AFSC-CM, orange bar; p < 0.01 vs. control; p = n.s. vs. nitrofen group), Total Exosome Isolation Reagent AFSC-EVs (TEIR, brown bar; p < 0.0001 vs. control; p = n.s. vs. nitrofen group), or qEV AFSC-EVs (blue bar; p < 0.0001 vs. control; p = n.s. vs. nitrofen group). Conditions of each treatment, conducted in at least n = 4 experiments, are shown below the x-axis. (b) No correlation was found between EV size and the rate of cell death [p = 0.3, r = −0.6 (95% CI −0.97 to 0.6)]. (c) No correlation was found between EV protein concentration and the rate of cell death [p = 0.3, r = −0.6 (95% CI −0.96 to 0.6)]. (d) There was a negative correlation between total number of EV particles and the rate of cell death [p = 0.01, r = −0.97 (95% CI −0.99 to −0.48)]. (e) Dose curve analysis of AFSC-EVs isolated with qEV and administered to nitrofen-injured A549 cells. The rate of cell death decreased proportionally by increasing the concentration of AFSC-EVs. Treatment with > 40% by volume AFSC-EVs brought the rate of cell death back to control levels (p = n.s. vs. control). In addition, using 10% by volume qEV from pooled fractions 7 to 11 also reduced rate of cell death back to control levels (p = n.s. vs. control). Data are shown as mean ± standard deviation and are representative of the following number of biological replicates per condition: Control, n = 16; nitrofen, n = 14; 10% UC AFSC-EVs, n = 14; 10% Exo-PREP AFSC-EVs, n = 5; 10% ExoQuick AFSC-EVs, n = 4; 10% TEIR AFSC-EVs, n = 5; 10% AFSC-CM, n = 3; 10% EV-depleted AFSC-CM, n = 3; 10% qEV AFSC-EVs, n = 9; 20% qEV AFSC-EVs, n = 3; 40% qEV AFSC-EVs, n = 3; 60% qEV AFSC-EVs, n = 3; 10% qEV AFSC-EVs pooled fraction 7–11, n = 5.
Studies reporting the isolation, characterization, and use of Amniotic Fluid Stem Cell-Extracellular Vesicles (AFSC-EVs).
| Reference | Species | AFSC isolation | EV isolation technique | Model | Biological effect |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Romani | Human | Morphologic selection and confirmation with FACS and RT-PCR | UC | Decrease in T-cell proliferation and expression of immune-modulatory protein IDO1 | |
| Xiao | Mouse | FACS of AFSCs expanded in culture | ExoQuick-TC | Decrease in granulosa cell apoptosis via microRNA10a | |
| Decrease in granulosa cell apoptosis and preservation of ovarian follicles | |||||
| Balbi | Human | c-Kit+ immunoselection (MACS) | UC | Inhibition of C2C12 apoptosis, increase in fibroblast proliferation and immunomodulation of peripheral blood mononuclear cells | |
| Decrease in skeletal muscle inflammation | |||||
| Mellows | Human | c-Kit+ immunoselection (MACS) | UC | Decreased inflammation by suppression of NF-kB signaling | |
| Angiogenesis and muscle fiber regeneration | |||||
| Sedrakyan | Mouse | c-Kit+ immunoselection (MACS) | UC (+FACS) | Protection against VEGF-induced glomerular endothelial cell damage | |
| Improvement of renal physiological parameters (proteinuria and serum creatinine) | |||||
| Beretti | Human | c-Kit+ immunoselection (MACS) | TEIR | Decrease in T-cell proliferation | |
| This study | Rat | c-Kit+ immunoselection (MACS) | UC, Exo-PREP, ExoQuick, TEIR, qEV | Decrease in A549 cell apoptosis |
FACS: Fluorescence Activated Cell Sorting.
RT-PCR: Reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction.
UC: Ultracentrifugation.
IDO1: Indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase.
MACS: Magnetic Activated Cell Sorting.
VEGF: Vascular endothelial growth factor.
TEIR: Total Exosome Isolation Reagent.