| Literature DB >> 35812131 |
Haichuan Wang1, Di Wu2, Sonal Sukreet2, Anthony Delaney1, Mandy B Belfort3, Janos Zempleni1.
Abstract
We assessed feasibility of analyzing exosomes and microRNA cargos in frozen human milk as a pre-requisite for epidemiological studies of milk exosomes. We collected milk from five mother-preterm infant dyads at 3 time points during postnatal hospital care for storage at -80°C. We purified exosomes by ultracentrifugation, probed marker proteins using immunoblots, assessed size and counts with a nanoparticle tracker, and quantified three microRNAs with quantitative PCR. Positive exosome marker proteins were detectable; β-casein was the only detectable contaminant. Exosome count and size trended to decrease from early to late samples (count: 2.3×109 ± 3.8×109 to 5.6×108 ± 9.7×108 exosomes/mL; size: 117 ± 25 to 92 ± 16 nm). Two microRNAs were detectable in early samples only; cycle threshold values equaled 28.7 ± 0.7 for miR-30d-5p and miR-125a-5p; miR-423-5p was not detectable. We conclude that the analysis of exosomes and quantification of microRNAs is feasible in human milk previously stored at -80°C.Entities:
Keywords: authentication; detection; epidemiology; infants; stability
Year: 2022 PMID: 35812131 PMCID: PMC9258983 DOI: 10.1097/pg9.0000000000000172
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JPGN Rep ISSN: 2691-171X