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Detailed analysis of the plasma extracellular vesicle proteome after separation from lipoproteins
Authors:Nasibeh Karimi  Aleksander Cvjetkovic  Su Chul Jang  Rossella Crescitelli  Mohammad Ali Hosseinpour Feizi  Rienk Nieuwland  Jan Lötvall  Cecilia Lässer
Affiliation:1.Krefting Research Centre, Institute of Medicine at Sahlgrenska Academy,University of Gothenburg,Gothenburg,Sweden;2.Department of Animal Biology, Faculty of Natural Sciences,University of Tabriz,Tabriz,Iran;3.Codiak BioSciences,Cambridge,USA;4.Laboratory of Experimental Clinical Chemistry, Department of Clinical Chemistry, and Vesicle Observation Centre,Academic Medical Centre of the University of Amsterdam,Amsterdam,The Netherlands
Abstract:The isolation of extracellular vesicles (EVs) from blood is of great importance to understand the biological role of circulating EVs and to develop EVs as biomarkers of disease. Due to the concurrent presence of lipoprotein particles, however, blood is one of the most difficult body fluids to isolate EVs from. The aim of this study was to develop a robust method to isolate and characterise EVs from blood with minimal contamination by plasma proteins and lipoprotein particles. Plasma and serum were collected from healthy subjects, and EVs were isolated by size-exclusion chromatography (SEC), with most particles being present in fractions 8–12, while the bulk of the plasma proteins was present in fractions 11–28. Vesicle markers peaked in fractions 7–11; however, the same fractions also contained lipoprotein particles. The purity of EVs was improved by combining a density cushion with SEC to further separate lipoprotein particles from the vesicles, which reduced the contamination of lipoprotein particles by 100-fold. Using this novel isolation procedure, a total of 1187 proteins were identified in plasma EVs by mass spectrometry, of which several proteins are known as EV-associated proteins but have hitherto not been identified in the previous proteomic studies of plasma EVs. This study shows that SEC alone is unable to completely separate plasma EVs from lipoprotein particles. However, combining SEC with a density cushion significantly improved the separation of EVs from lipoproteins and allowed for a detailed analysis of the proteome of plasma EVs, thus making blood a viable source for EV biomarker discovery.
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