La Trobe

A standardized method to determine the concentration of extracellular vesicles using tunable resistive pulse sensing

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posted on 2022-05-08, 23:48 authored by R Vogel, FAW Coumans, RG Maltesen, AN Boing, KE Bonnington, ML Broekman, MF Broom, EI Buzas, G Christiansen, N Hajji, SR Kristensen, MJ Kuehn, SM Lund, SLN Maas, R Nieuwland, X Osteikoetxea, R Schnoor, BJ Scicluna, Mitch ShambrookMitch Shambrook, J de Vrij, SI Mann, Andrew HillAndrew Hill, S Pedersen
Background: Understanding the pathogenic role of extracellular vesicles (EVs) in disease and their potential diagnostic and therapeutic utility is extremely reliant on in-depth quantification, measurement and identification of EV sub-populations. Quantification of EVs has presented several challenges, predominantly due to the small size of vesicles such as exosomes and the availability of various technologies to measure nanosized particles, each technology having its own limitations. Materials and Methods: A standardized methodology to measure the concentration of extracellular vesicles (EVs) has been developed and tested. The method is based on measuring the EVconcentration as a function of a defined size range. Blood plasma EVs are isolated and purified using size exclusion columns (qEV) and consecutively measured with tunable resistive pulse sensing (TRPS). Six independent research groups measured liposome and EV samples with the aim to evaluate the developed methodology. Each group measured identical samples using up to 5 nanopores with 3 repeat measurements per pore. Descriptive statistics and unsupervised multivariate data analysis with principal component analysis (PCA) were used to evaluate reproducibility across the groups and to explore and visualise possible patterns and outliers in EV and liposome data sets. Results: PCA revealed good reproducibility within and between laboratories, with few minor outlying samples. Measured mean liposome (not filtered with qEV) and EV (filtered with qEV) concentrations had coefficients of variance of 23.9% and 52.5%, respectively. The increased variance of the EV concentration measurements could be attributed to the use of qEVs and the polydisperse nature of EVs. Conclusion: The results of this study demonstrate the feasibility of this standardized methodology to facilitate comparable and reproducible EV concentration measurements.

History

Publication Date

2016-01-01

Journal

Journal of Extracellular Vesicles

Volume

5

Issue

1

Article Number

31242

Pagination

13p. (p. 1-13)

Publisher

Taylor & Francis

ISSN

2001-3078

Rights Statement

© 2016 Robert Vogel et al. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/), permitting all non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

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