| Literature DB >> 35887332 |
Chiew Yong Ng1, Li Ting Kee1, Maimonah Eissa Al-Masawa1, Qian Hui Lee1, Thayaalini Subramaniam1, David Kok1,2, Min Hwei Ng1, Jia Xian Law1.
Abstract
Extracellular vesicles (EVs) are minute vesicles with lipid bilayer membranes. EVs are secreted by cells for intercellular communication. Recently, EVs have received much attention, as they are rich in biological components such as nucleic acids, lipids, and proteins that play essential roles in tissue regeneration and disease modification. In addition, EVs can be developed as vaccines against cancer and infectious diseases, as the vesicle membrane has an abundance of antigenic determinants and virulent factors. EVs for therapeutic applications are typically collected from conditioned media of cultured cells. However, the number of EVs secreted by the cells is limited. Thus, it is critical to devise new strategies for the large-scale production of EVs. Here, we discussed the strategies utilized by researchers for the scalable production of EVs. Techniques such as bioreactors, mechanical stimulation, electrical stimulation, thermal stimulation, magnetic field stimulation, topographic clue, hypoxia, serum deprivation, pH modification, exposure to small molecules, exposure to nanoparticles, increasing the intracellular calcium concentration, and genetic modification have been used to improve the secretion of EVs by cultured cells. In addition, nitrogen cavitation, porous membrane extrusion, and sonication have been utilized to prepare EV-mimetic nanovesicles that share many characteristics with naturally secreted EVs. Apart from inducing EV production, these upscaling interventions have also been reported to modify the EVs' cargo and thus their functionality and therapeutic potential. In summary, it is imperative to identify a reliable upscaling technique that can produce large quantities of EVs consistently. Ideally, the produced EVs should also possess cargo with improved therapeutic potential.Entities:
Keywords: bioreactor; culture medium; extracellular vesicle; large-scale; production; stem cell; three-dimensional culture
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35887332 PMCID: PMC9315612 DOI: 10.3390/ijms23147986
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 6.208
Figure 1Type, cargo, and therapeutic potential of extracellular vesicles. Created with BioRender.com.
Figure 2Scalable production of extracellular vesicles. Physical stimulation, chemical stimulation, 3D culture, physiological modification, and genetic manipulation can stimulate cells to produce more extracellular vesicles. In addition, EV-mimetic nanovesicles can be produced via nitrogen cavitation, porous membrane extrusion, and sonication. Created with BioRender.com.
Strategies to increase EV production.
| Strategies | Type of Induction | Cells | Exposure Period or Method | EV Isolation Method | Enhancement Factor | Therapeutic Application | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3D culture | Hollow-fiber bioreactor (FiberCell Systems) | UC-MSCs | Cell expansion and medium conditioning | Ultracentrifugation | Bradford assay: 7.5-fold increase in small EV protein concentration | Possessed superior chondroprotective effects to those of 2D small EVs in vitro and in vivo | [ |
| Hollow-fiber bioreactor (FiberCell System) | UC-MSCs | Cell expansion and medium conditioning | Ultracentrifugation | BCA assay: 19.4-fold increase in small EV protein concentration | Possessed superior renoprotective efficacy to that of 2D small EVs in vitro and in vivo | [ | |
| Vertical-Wheel™ bioreactors (VWBR) | BM-MSCs, AT-MSCs, and UC-MSCs | Cell expansion and medium conditioning | Precipitation (total exosome isolation reagent) | NTA: 4.0, 4.4, and 8.8-fold increases in small EV particle concentration for BM-MSCs, AT-MSCs, and UC-MSCs, respectively | Not reported | [ | |
| Hollow-fiber bioreactor (FiberCell System) | hetIL-15-overexpressed HEK293 cells (clone 19.7) | Cell expansion and medium conditioning | Ultracentrifugation | Bradford assay: 40-fold increase in small EV protein concentration | Bioactivity of small EV-associated hetIL-15 was maintained (hetIL-15 activates NK cells) | [ | |
| Hollow-fiber bioreactor (FiberCell System) | BM-MSCs | Cell expansion and medium conditioning | Precipitation (total exosome isolation reagent) | NTA: 1.9 × 1010 ± 1.1 × 1010 small EV articles/mL on day 1, 8.2 × 109 ± 3.0 × 109 small EV particles/mL on day 13, and 8.1 × 109 ± 3.3 × 109 small EV particles/mL on day 25 | Possessed immunomodulatory properties | [ | |
| Ultrafoam scaffolds (collagen type I) | MSCs | Cell expansion and medium conditioning | Precipitation (ExoQuick) | BCA assay: twofold increase in small EV protein concentration | Enhanced neurological functional recovery of traumatic brain injury model compared with 2D-culture and liposome groups | [ | |
| 3D-printed scaffold perfusion bioreactor | Human dermal microvascular endothelial cells (hDMECs) | Cell expansion and medium conditioning | Ultracentrifugation | NTA: 100- and 10,000-fold increases in small EV particle concentration on days 1 and 3, respectively; CD63 exoELISA: 14-fold increase in CD63+ EV concentration; BCA assay: 6.7-fold increase in small EV protein concentration, but decreased protein content per EV | Enhanced vascularization bioactivity in 3D-scaffold groups (bioreactor and static) pretreated with 100 nM ethanol | [ | |
| 3D spheroids | BM-MSCs | Cell expansion and medium conditioning | Precipitation (ExoQuick-TC) | Bradford assay: 2-fold increase in EV protein concentration for hanging-drop 3D spheroid culture; 2.4-fold increase for poly-HEMA coated-3D spheroid culture | Not reported | [ | |
| Physical stimulation | Ionizing radiation (X-ray: 2 Gy) | MCF7 breast epithelial cancer cells | 4 h | Ultracentrifugation | TRPS: threefold increase in small EV particle concentration in the direct irradiated group; sixfold increase in bystander group | Identified that small EVs play a role in nontargeted effects of irradiation (cancer therapy) | [ |
| Gamma | Human lung cancer cell lines (LLC and A549) | 12, 24, 36, or 48 h | Centrifugation | Flow cytometry: fourfold increase in EV particle concentration in both hypoxia and gamma irradiation treatment groups | Identified that the microenvironment caused EV change | [ | |
| Ionizing radiation (X-ray: 4 Gy) | Human glioblastoma cell lines (LN18, U251, U87MG), glioblastoma stem-like cells (GBAM1 and GBMJ1), and astrocytes | 12 to 48 h | Ultracentrifugation | NTA: 1.23- to 2.6-fold increases in small EV particle concentration | Increased cell migration and uptake efficiency, showing that intercellular signaling reacted to therapeutic radiation | [ | |
| Ultraviolet irradiation stress treatment (UV; 40 W), low-pH culture medium treatment (LP; pH 4.0), high-temperature treatment (HT; 40 °C), H2O2 treatment (H2O2; 250 × 10−6 m), and hypoxic environment treatment (Hyp; 100% N2) | Human gastric cancer cells (MGC803) and human liver cancer cells (HepG2) | Not reported | Ultracentrifugation | BCA assay: 1.9-fold increases in small EV protein content in UV, LP, and HT treatments; 1.7-fold increase in H2O2; 1.5-fold increase in HYP | Increased uptake efficiency | [ | |
| Photodynamic therapy (Foscan® photosensitizer: 0.02, 0.08, 0.2, 0.5, 2 or 10 μM) and chemotherapeutic agent (doxorubicin: 0.1, 0.5, 2, 5, 10 and 50 μM) | Human prostatic cancer cells (PC-3) | 2 h exposed to light for 5 s at a wavelength of 470 nm (7.5 J/cm2) | Not reported | NTA: 15- and 6-fold increases in large EV particle concentration for PDT and doxorubicin treatment, respectively | The released large EVs may counterbalance the desired regional limitation of a treatment and represent an underestimated source of adverse effects during PDT | [ | |
| Acoustic irradiation: surface-reflected bulk waves (SRBWs, 4 W) and electromechanical hybrid surface (order of 10 MHz) | Human glioblastoma cells (U87-MG) and adenocarcinoma human alveolar basal epithelial cells (A549) | 10 min followed by 30 min postexcitation incubation period | Column-based (PureExoⓇ Exosome Isolation Kit) | AChE activity: 1.7-fold increase in small EV AChE activity in the first 30 min, followed by a reduction | Exosome therapy: cancer vaccine and biomarker | [ | |
| Ionizing radiation (X-ray: 0 Gy; 0.1 Gy; 1 Gy; 10 Gy) | Neuroblastoma cell lines (SH-SY5Y and SK-N-BE) | 3 h | Ultracentrifugation | Flow cytometry: 2.7-fold and 4.5-fold increases in small EV particle concentration with 0.1 Gy and 10 Gy radiation, respectively, for the SH-SY5Y cell line; 3.8-fold increase with 10 Gy radiation for the SK-N-BE cell line | Increased proliferation and invasiveness, showing side effects of radiation therapy | [ | |
| Electrical stimulation (0.34 mA/cm2) | Melanoma cell line (B16F1) and murine fibroblast cell line (3T3) | 1 h | Ultracentrifugation | TRPS: 1.26- and 1.7-fold increases in EV particle concentration for B16F1 and 3T3 cells, respectively | Not reported | [ | |
| Cellular nanoporation (CNP) | Embryonic fibroblasts (MEFs) or bone marrow-derived dendritic cells (BMDCs) | 4, 8, 12, 16, 20, and 24 h | Ultracentrifugation | DLS and NTA: 50-fold increase in EV particle concentration and >1000-fold increase in exosomal mRNA transcripts | Targeted therapy by transfer of desired peptides (through CD74) led to longer circulatory half-life, significantly inhibited glioma tumor growth in vivo, and prolonged survival | [ | |
| Medium containing magnetic nanoparticles (Fe3O4: 50 µg/mL) and/or static magnetic field (SMF: 100 mT) | BMSCs | 7 and 14 days | Ultracentrifugation | BCA assay: 1.4-fold increase in small EV protein concentration for Fe3O4 group; 1.7-fold increase for Fe3O4 + SMF group | Enhanced osteogenesis and angiogenesis in vitro and in vivo | [ | |
| Cyclic stretch (20% | Periodontal ligament cells | 24 h | Cell culture supernatant | CD63 ELISA Kit (PS Capture™ Exosome ELISA Kit): 33-fold increase in CD63+ EV concentration | Inhibited IL-1β production and pyroptosis of LPS-primed macrophage | [ | |
| Micro-/nanotextured hierarchical titanium topography (native titanium specimens (SLM); SLM + 250 μm ZrO2 particles + 5% hydrofluoric acid (HF) (SLA); SLA + 5 M NaOH (SAH); SLA + 0.3 wt% ammonium fluoride (NH4F) + ethylene glycol (C2H6O2) solution (SAO)) | BMSCs | During cell culture | Kit (EIQ3) | AChE activity: 1.1-fold, 1.7-fold, and 1.6-fold increases in small EV AChE activity in SLA, SAH, and SAO groups, respectively, compared with SLM group | Improved osseointegration in vitro and in vivo | [ | |
| Platinum | Human lung epithelial adenocarcinoma cancer cells (A549) | 24 h | Precipitation (ExoQuick) | BCA assay: 3.9-fold increase in small EV protein concentration; fluorescence polarization: 4.8-fold increase in small EV particle concentration; NTA: 4.1-fold increase in small EV particle concentration; EXOCET: 5.9-fold increase in small EV particle concentration | Not reported | [ | |
| 45S5 Bioglass® | Human MSCs | 12 to 72 h or 48 h | Ultracentrifugation and ultrafiltration | AChE activity: No significant difference in small EV AChE concentration in the first 12 h; 1.3-, 1.4-, and 1.6-fold increases at 24, 48, and 72 h, respectively | Promoted vascularization of umbilical vein endothelial cells in vitro and in vivo | [ | |
| Chemical stimulation | Sodium iodoacetate and 2,4-dinitrophenol (IAA/DNP) (in vitro: 1 or 10 µM; ex vivo: 5, 10, or 30 µM; in vivo: 0.195 or 0.975 μmol) | UMSCC47, PCI-13, Mel526, SVEC4–10 (in vitro); murine kidney tissue explant (ex vivo); mice (in vivo) | 72 h (in vitro); 48 h (ex vivo); 14 days (in vivo) | Size-exclusion chromatography | BCA assay: 3- to 16-; 1.8-, and 2.9-fold increases in small EV protein concentration in vitro, ex vivo, and in vivo, respectively | Possessed similar biological properties and functional effects on endothelial cells (SVEC4-10) | [ |
| Fenoterol, norepinephrine, N-methyldopamine, mephenesin, and forskolin | BMSCs | 24 h | Ultracentrifugation | NTA: 1.7- to 2.3-fold increase in small EV particle concentration, which further increased when combining compounds (2.5- to 3-fold) | Possessed regenerative activities as control small EVs | [ | |
| Suxiao Jiuxin pill, tetramethylpyrazine, or borneol | Murine cardiac MSCs | 48 h | Precipitation (polyethylene glycol 4000) | AChE activity: 3.4-fold, 2.4-fold, and 1.3-fold increases in small EV AChE activity in Suxiao Jiuxin pill, tetramethylpyrazine, and borneol treatments, respectively | Not reported | [ | |
| Adiponectin (20 μg/mL) from serum collected from APN-knockout mice | T-cadherin-expressing murine vascular endothelial cells (F2T cells) | 36 h | Ultracentrifugation | AChE activity: 7.8-fold increase in small EV AChE activity; NTA: 2.9-fold increase in small EV particle concentration | Adiponectin-induced small EV release affected ceramide metabolism, which could be helpful for adiponectin-related organ protection therapy | [ | |
| High-molecular-weight adiponectin (20 μg/mL; in vitro) or pioglitazone (30 mg/kg twice a day; in vivo) | Human adipose tissue-derived MSCs | 48 h (in vitro) and two weeks (in vivo) | Ultracentrifugation | Densitometry of Western blot: increased small EV production in vitro and in vivo; NTA: 3.3-fold increase in small EV particle concentration in vitro | Augmented the cardioprotective effects of MSCs in transverse aortic constriction-operated mice | [ | |
| Docosahexaenoic acid (DHA; 100 μM) | Human breast cancer cells (MCF7 and MDA-MB-231) | 24 h | Ultracentrifugation or precipitation (ExoQuick-TC reagent) | CD63-GFP fluorescent spectrometry: 1.1-fold increase in CD63+ EV concentration in MCF7 and MDA-MB-231 cell lines | Increased RNA content in breast cancer CD63+ EVs promoted anticancer and anti-angiogenic activity | [ | |
| Sodium ionophore (Monensin; 1, 5, 10 µM), calcium ionophore (A23187; 1 µM), or human transferrin (20 µg/mL) | Human erythroleukemia cell line (K562) | 7 h for monensin and A23187; 12 h for transferrin treatment | Ultracentrifugation | AChE activity: 20%, 71.5%, and 97.6% increases in EV AChE activity with 1, 5, and 10 µM of monensin; 1.7-fold increase with A23187; 1.4-fold with transferrin | Not reported | [ | |
| Sodium ionophore (Monensin: 7 µM) | Rab11-transfected human erythroleukemia cell line (K562) | 7 h | Ultracentrifugation | AChE activity: 2.0-, 1.8-, 3.8-fold, and 3.7-fold increases in EV AChE activity with monensin treatment in vector, Rab11 wildtype, Rab11 Q70L (a GTPase-deficient mutant), and Rab11 S25N (aGTP-binding deficient mutant) cells, respectively | Not reported | [ | |
| Calcium phosphate (CaP) particles (500 and 1000 μg/mL) | Macrophage-like cells (RAW264.7) and monocyte-like cells (THP-1) | 1, 2, 4, 6, 24, 48, and 72 h | Precipitation (total exosome isolation kit) | EXOCET exosome quantitation assay kit: 2-and 2.5-fold increases in small EV particle concentration at 72 h with 500 μg/mL CaP for RAW264.7 and THP-1 cell lines, respectively | Not reported | [ | |
| Ionomycin (2.5 µM) and TGFβ-1 (5 ng/mL) | Human breast carcinoma cell | 30 min of ionomycin treatment | Density gradient ultracentrifugation | CD63+ Slot blot: 5- and 3-fold increases in CD63+ EV concentration for ionomycin and TGFβ-1 treatments, respectively | Not reported | [ | |
| Phosphorothioate (PS) B-class CpG oligonucleotides | Salmon head kidney leukocytes (HKLs), Atlantic salmon kidney cells (ASK cells), chinook salmon embryo cells (CHSE-214 cells), or HEK293T cells | 1 h (2006PS, | Ultracentrifugation | Densitometry of Western blot (Alix): 10.1-, 16.7-, and 9.1-fold increases in Alix+ EV protein content for ODN 2006PS-treated HKLs, ASK cells, and CHSE-214 cells, respectively; for HEK293T cells, 3.3-, 2.1-, and 9-fold increases in Alix+ EV protein content for 2006PS, | Not reported | [ | |
| Cationic bare liposomes (CL: HSPC-based or DOPE-based; 0.5 to 2 mM) or neutral bare liposomes | Murine | 48 h | Ultracentrifugation or precipitation (ExoQuick-TCTM) | Bio-Rad DC® protein assay: 2.5-, 2.3-, 1.7-, and 1.8-fold increases in EV protein concentration with 2 mM of NL for C26, B16B16, MKN45, and DLD-1 cell lines, respectively; 3.4-, 3.4-, 3.7-, and 2.9-fold increases in EV protein concentration with 2 mM of HSPC-based CL for C26, B16B16, MKN45, and DLD-1 cell lines, respectively. DOPE-based CLs further increased EV protein concentration (up to 3.17-fold) | Liposome-stimulated EVs showed higher cellular uptake | [ | |
| Physiological modification | Hypoxic (1% O2, 0.1% O2, or 1 mM DMOG) | Breast cancer cell lines MCF7, SKBR3, and MDAMB | 24 h (1% O2) or 48 h (0.1% O2 and DMOG) | Precipitation (ExoQuickTM) | NTA: Up to 1.41-fold, 1.94-fold, and 1.45-fold increases in small EV particle concentration at 1% O2, 0.1% O2, and 1 mM DMOG, respectively | Highlighted the importance of the study of EV-mediated pathological hypoxic signaling in tumor progression | [ |
| Hypoxic (5% O2) | Human umbilical cord MSCs | 24 h | Ultracentrifugation | NTA: twofold increase in small EV particle concentration | Better attenuated OVA-induced chronic airway inflammation and lung parenchyma fibrosis in mice | [ | |
| Hypoxic (1% O2) | BMSCs | 48 h | Ultrafiltration and density gradient ultracentrifugation | BCA assay: 1.4-fold increase in small EV protein concentration | Better protected cartilage from degeneration and slowed down the progression of OA in vitro and in vivo | [ | |
| Hypoxic (1% O2) | BMSCs | 48 h | Ultrafiltration and density gradient ultracentrifugation | BCA assay: 1.4-fold increase in small EV protein concentration | Promoted to a greater extent functional behavioral recovery in mice and M1 to M2 phenotype polarization in vivo and in vitro | [ | |
| Hypoxic (1% O2) and/or serum-free stimulation | UC-MSCs | 72 h | Ultracentrifugation | Bradford assay: 5.6-, 4.3-, and 7.5-fold increases in CD29+, CD44+, CD73+, CD31−, and CD45− EVs (authors identified the EVs as microvesicles) under hypoxic conditions, serum-free stimulation, and hypoxic and serum-free conditions, respectively | CD29+, CD44+, CD73+, CD31−, and CD45− EVs promoted angiogenesis and were superior in hypoxia endothelial cells | [ | |
| Hypoxic (0.5% O2) | Mouse MSCs | 24 h | Ultracentrifugation | NTA: 1.3-fold increase in small EV particle concentration | Superior ability in proangiogenesis and antiapoptosis in vitro and cardiac protection in vivo | [ | |
| Lentivirus pWPI-HIF-1α-GFP transduction | Dental pulp MSCs | Lentivirus transduction | Ultracentrifugation | Densitometry of Western blot: 3.3-, 6.3-, and 1.5-fold increases in CD63, CD9, and CD81 density AChE activity; 2.1-fold increase in small EV AChE activity | Superior angiogenic ability in vitro and in vivo via enhanced expression of the Notch ligand Jagged1 | [ | |
| Peripheral arterial disease conditions (0% serum and 1% O2) | BMSCs | 40 h | Centrifugation (higher density EVs (claimed as microvesicles)) or ultracentrifugation (lower density EVs (claimed as exosomes)) | BCA assay: 9-fold decrease in high-density EV protein concentration; 6.6-fold increase in low-density EV protein concentration | EVs contained a robust profile of angiogenic signaling proteins and induced angiogenesis | [ | |
| Heat stress (42 °C) | Epstein–Barr virus (EBV)-immortalized human B-lymphoblastoid cell | 3 h | Density gradient ultracentrifugation | BCA assay: 1.25-fold increase in EV protein concentration for all cell lines | Significantly increased heat shock proteins of cells and EVs but did not trigger dendritic cell maturation | [ | |
| Heat stress (40 °C), | Jurkat and Raji cells | 1 h | Density gradient ultracentrifugation | Densitometry of Western blot (CD63): 3- and 15-fold increases in CD63+ EV protein concentration after thermal and oxidative stress, respectively, for Jurkat cells; 22- and 32-fold increases after thermal and oxidative stress for Raji cells | Partly provided a mechanistic explanation of the clinically observed NK-cell dysfunction in patients suffering from leukemia/lymphoma, which could be further impaired in conditions of cellular stress | [ | |
| Cytostatic stress (0.6 μM doxorubicin), heat stress (42 °C), oxidative stress (2.5 μg/mL | B16F1 mouse melanoma cell | 72 h heat stress (3 × 2 h) | Ultracentrifugation | NTA: 3.6-, 2.5-, and 1.6-fold increases in small EV particle concentration after doxorubicin, heat stress, and oxidative stress, respectively | Microenvironmental conditions altered small EV cargoes and explained the importance of determining therapy-induced host response | [ | |
| pH (pH 6.0) | Mel1 melanoma cell lines | Cell culture and medium conditioning | Density gradient ultracentrifugation | BCA assay: 3.2- and 6.3-fold increases in Lamp-2+, CD81+, and Rab 5B+ EVs on days 3 and 4, respectively | Acidic microenvironment favored EV-to-cell fusion | [ | |
| pH (pH 4, 7, and 11) | HEK 293 | 30 min | Precipitation (ExoQuick isolation kit) | BCA assay: 5-fold increase in CD9+, CD63+, and Hsp70+ EV protein concentration at pH 4, while pH 11 gave a negative result (3.5-fold decrease) | Acidic pH could increase the stability of EVs in vitro | [ | |
| Genetic manipulation | PLD2 cDNA electroporation | RBL-2H3 | Murine PLD2 cDNA electroporation | Ionomycin degranulation then ultracentrifugation | FACS: Twofold increase in BODIPY-ceramide labeled EV concentration | Not reported | [ |
| Rab13 knockdown | Mutant KRAS DKO-1 colorectal cancer cells | Rab13 shRNA transfection | Ultracentrifugation | NTA: 14.3-fold decrease in small EV production when Rab13 was knocked down in mutant KRAS cells | Not reported | [ | |
| Rab27a or Rab27b knockdown | HeLa cell line | Transfection | Ultracentrifugation | Bradford assay: 2.5- and 2.2-fold decreases in small EV protein content for Rab27a knockdown and Rab27b knockdown cells, respectively | Not reported | [ | |
| CD9 lentiviral transduction | HEK293, HEK293FT, Raji, Jurkat, and HeLa | pLenti6.3-CD9GFP lentiviral transduction | PEG centrifugation | NTA: 2.5-fold increase in small EV particle concentration in HEK293-CD9GFP cells; more than 3-fold increase in HEK293FT-CD9GFP; 2-fold increase in Raji-CD9GFP and Jurkat-CD9GFP; no significant difference for HeLa-CD9GFP | Not reported | [ | |
| Liver kinase B1 (LKB1) lentiviral transduction | H460 | pCDH-LKB1 lentiviral transduction | Ultracentrifugation | NTA: 12.5-fold increase in small EV particle concentration | Enhanced cell migration ability and showed the ambiguity of cancer therapy targeting LKB1 function | [ | |
| Upregulation of EIF3C | Hepatocellular carcinoma cell lines: PLC5 and SNU-449 | NA | Precipitation (total exosome isolation reagent) | Electron microscopy and NTA: Increased small EV particle concentration | EIF3C may act as a cancer target in cancer therapy | [ | |
| PIKfyve inhibition (apilimod or siRNA transfection) | Human prostate cancer epithelial cell line (PC-3) | Apilimod or siRNA transfection | Ultracentrifugation and OptiPrep density gradient centrifugation | NTA and BCA assay: Apilimod treatment increased small EV particle concentration 1.6-fold and small EV protein content 1.4-fold; siRNA transfection increased small EV particle concentration 1.5-fold | Not reported | [ | |
| MYC gene overexpression | hESC-MSC (HuES9.E1 MSCs) | GFP- or MYC-containing lentivirus transduction | HPLC | Not reported | Provided an infinite supply of cells for the production of small EVs with cardioprotective activity | [ | |
| Preparation of EV-mimetic nanovesicles | Nitrogen cavitation (400–500 psi at 0 °C) | Promyelocytic leukemia cell line (HL-60) | 20 min | Centrifugation | BCA assay: 16-fold increase in EV-mimetic nanovesicle protein concentration | Prevented sepsis-induced inflammation and increased animal survival after loading of piceatannol | [ |
| Sonication (42 kHz and a power of 100 W) of the mixture of macrophage membranes and nanoparticle cores | Murine J774 macrophage cell line | 2 min | Macrophage membranes mixed with nanoparticle cores at the ratio of 1:1 | Not reported | Promoted proinflammatory cytokine sequestration and endotoxin neutralization in vitro and in vivo | [ | |
| Ultrasonication (20%) | Human umbilical cord-MSCs | 1 min | Centrifugation | 18.5-fold increase in EV-mimetic nanovesicle production | Enhanced skin rejuvenation and promoted wound healing in vitro and in vivo | [ | |
| Serial extrusion through filters with diminishing pore sizes | Human U937 monocytic cells | Not reported | OptiPrep density gradient ultracentrifugation | NTA: 100-fold increase in doxorubicin-loaded EV-mimetic nanovesicle particle concentration | Targeted delivery of chemotherapeutic drug had a similar antitumor effect to that of doxorubicin-loaded natural EVs in vitro and in vivo | [ | |
| Serial extrusion through filters with diminishing pore sizes | Mouse embryonic fibroblasts NIH3T3 and human U937 monocytic cells | Not reported | Two-step OptiPrep density gradient | Not reported | Therapeutic vesicles (c-Myc siRNA-loaded nanovesicles) targeted diseases associated with c-Myc overexpression | [ | |
| Serial extrusion through filters with diminishing pore sizes | Adipose-derived stem cells | Not reported | Two-step OptiPrep density gradient | NTA: 30-fold increase in EV-mimetic nanovesicle particle concentration | Possessed similar regenerative effects to those of natural EVs in vitro and enhanced regenerative ability in emphysema mouse model | [ | |
| Serial extrusion through filters with diminishing pore sizes | Not reported | Two-step OptiPrep density gradient ultracentrifugation | BCA assay: 100-fold increase in EV-mimetic nanovesicle protein concentration | Promoted hepatocyte proliferation in vitro and liver regeneration in vivo | [ | ||
| Alkaline solutions (sodium carbonate solution) | Human U937 monocytes | Not reported | Sonication then density gradient ultracentrifugation | Bradford assay: 200-fold increase in EV-mimetic nanovesicle protein concentration | Reduced the release of IL-8 from OMV-treated endothelial cells in vitro and mitigated the symptoms of OMV-induced SIRS in vivo by dexamethasone-loaded EV-mimetic nanovesicles | [ | |
| Sulfhydryl-blocking agents | Mouse lymphoma cell line (EL4) | 2 h | Ultracentrifugation and centrifugal filtration | BCA assay: More than 10-fold increase in EV-mimetic nanovesicle protein concentration | Better cellular absorption and intracellular release of doxorubicin than liposomes; more effective in slowing down tumor growth than free doxorubicin and liposome-encapsulated doxorubicin | [ | |
| Other factors | Seeding density (1 × 102 cells/cm2 or 1 × 104 cells/cm2) | BMSCs | Not reported | Ultracentrifugation and ultrafiltration | NTA: 100-, 85-, 105-, and 50-fold increases in small EV particle concentration with 1 × 102 cells/cm2 seeding density compared with 1 × 104 cells/cm2 seeding density at passages 2, 3, 4, and 5, respectively | Not reported | [ |
| Collection frequency (single or double collection) | BMSCs | 12 and/or 24 h collection time(s) | Ultracentrifugation and ultrafiltration | NTA: 1.6- to 2.6-fold increase in small EV particle concentration with two EV collections compared with a single collection in 24 h | Not reported | [ | |
| Cellular senescence (presenescent and senescent cells) | Primary normal human diploid fibroblasts (TIG-3 cells) | Serial passage or ectopic expression of oncogenic Ras | Density gradient ultracentrifugation | NTA: Significant increase in small EV particle concentration in senescent cells | Revealed the role of small EV secretion in the maintenance of cellular homeostasis | [ | |
| Cellular senescence (presenescent and senescent cells) | Human prostate cancer cells (22Rv1) and human dermal | Replicative senescence (serial passage) or accelerated senescence (irradiation: 4 Gy) | Ultracentrifugation | Vybrant DiI labeling: 3- and 15-fold increases in Vybrant Dil-labeled EV particles in accelerated senescent and replicative senescent cells, respectively | Not reported | [ | |
| Cellular senescence (presenescent and senescent cells) | Human diploid fibroblasts (HDFs; TIG-3 cells) | Replicative senescence (serial passage) or induced senescence (oncogenic Ras or doxorubicin induction) | Ultracentrifugation | NTA: 46.4-, 16.7-, and 6.8-fold increases in small EV particle concentration for replicative senescent cells, oncogenic Ras-induced senescent cells, and doxorubicin-induced senescent cells, respectively | Small EVs from senescent cells promoted the proliferation of human breast cancer MCF-7 cells, showing the protumorigenic effect of senescent cells | [ |