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Peptide-mediated ‘miniprep’ isolation of extracellular vesicles is suitable for high-throughput proteomics

Extracellular vesicles (EVs) are cell-secreted membrane vesicles enclosed by a lipid bilayer derived from endosomes or from the plasma membrane. Since EVs are released into body fluids, and their cargo includes tissue-specific and disease-related molecules, they represent a rich source for disease b...

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Autores principales: Knol, Jaco C., de Reus, Inge, Schelfhorst, Tim, Beekhof, Robin, de Wit, Meike, Piersma, Sander R., Pham, Thang V., Smit, Egbert F., Verheul, Henk M.W., Jiménez, Connie R.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5988555/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29900106
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.euprot.2016.02.001
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author Knol, Jaco C.
de Reus, Inge
Schelfhorst, Tim
Beekhof, Robin
de Wit, Meike
Piersma, Sander R.
Pham, Thang V.
Smit, Egbert F.
Verheul, Henk M.W.
Jiménez, Connie R.
author_facet Knol, Jaco C.
de Reus, Inge
Schelfhorst, Tim
Beekhof, Robin
de Wit, Meike
Piersma, Sander R.
Pham, Thang V.
Smit, Egbert F.
Verheul, Henk M.W.
Jiménez, Connie R.
author_sort Knol, Jaco C.
collection PubMed
description Extracellular vesicles (EVs) are cell-secreted membrane vesicles enclosed by a lipid bilayer derived from endosomes or from the plasma membrane. Since EVs are released into body fluids, and their cargo includes tissue-specific and disease-related molecules, they represent a rich source for disease biomarkers. However, standard ultracentrifugation methods for EV isolation are laborious, time-consuming, and require high inputs. Ghosh and co-workers recently described an isolation method utilizing Heat Shock Protein (HSP)-binding peptide Vn96 to aggregate HSP-decorated EVs, which can be performed at small ‘miniprep’ scale. Based on microscopic, immunoblot, and RNA sequencing analyses this method compared well with ultracentrifugation-mediated EV isolation, but a detailed proteomic comparison was lacking. Therefore, we compared both methods using label-free proteomics of replicate EV isolations from HT-29 cell-conditioned medium. Despite a 30-fold different scale (ultracentrifugation: 60 ml/Vn96-mediated aggregation: 2 ml) both methods yielded comparable numbers of identified proteins (3115/3085), with similar reproducibility of identification (72.5%/75.5%) and spectral count-based quantification (average CV: 31%/27%). EV fractions obtained with either method contained established EV markers and proteins linked to vesicle-related gene ontologies. Thus, Vn96 peptide-mediated aggregation is an advantageous, simple and rapid approach for EV isolation from small biological samples, enabling high-throughput analysis in a biomarker discovery setting.
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spelling pubmed-59885552018-06-13 Peptide-mediated ‘miniprep’ isolation of extracellular vesicles is suitable for high-throughput proteomics Knol, Jaco C. de Reus, Inge Schelfhorst, Tim Beekhof, Robin de Wit, Meike Piersma, Sander R. Pham, Thang V. Smit, Egbert F. Verheul, Henk M.W. Jiménez, Connie R. EuPA Open Proteom Short Communication Extracellular vesicles (EVs) are cell-secreted membrane vesicles enclosed by a lipid bilayer derived from endosomes or from the plasma membrane. Since EVs are released into body fluids, and their cargo includes tissue-specific and disease-related molecules, they represent a rich source for disease biomarkers. However, standard ultracentrifugation methods for EV isolation are laborious, time-consuming, and require high inputs. Ghosh and co-workers recently described an isolation method utilizing Heat Shock Protein (HSP)-binding peptide Vn96 to aggregate HSP-decorated EVs, which can be performed at small ‘miniprep’ scale. Based on microscopic, immunoblot, and RNA sequencing analyses this method compared well with ultracentrifugation-mediated EV isolation, but a detailed proteomic comparison was lacking. Therefore, we compared both methods using label-free proteomics of replicate EV isolations from HT-29 cell-conditioned medium. Despite a 30-fold different scale (ultracentrifugation: 60 ml/Vn96-mediated aggregation: 2 ml) both methods yielded comparable numbers of identified proteins (3115/3085), with similar reproducibility of identification (72.5%/75.5%) and spectral count-based quantification (average CV: 31%/27%). EV fractions obtained with either method contained established EV markers and proteins linked to vesicle-related gene ontologies. Thus, Vn96 peptide-mediated aggregation is an advantageous, simple and rapid approach for EV isolation from small biological samples, enabling high-throughput analysis in a biomarker discovery setting. Elsevier 2016-02-22 /pmc/articles/PMC5988555/ /pubmed/29900106 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.euprot.2016.02.001 Text en © 2016 The Authors http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle Short Communication
Knol, Jaco C.
de Reus, Inge
Schelfhorst, Tim
Beekhof, Robin
de Wit, Meike
Piersma, Sander R.
Pham, Thang V.
Smit, Egbert F.
Verheul, Henk M.W.
Jiménez, Connie R.
Peptide-mediated ‘miniprep’ isolation of extracellular vesicles is suitable for high-throughput proteomics
title Peptide-mediated ‘miniprep’ isolation of extracellular vesicles is suitable for high-throughput proteomics
title_full Peptide-mediated ‘miniprep’ isolation of extracellular vesicles is suitable for high-throughput proteomics
title_fullStr Peptide-mediated ‘miniprep’ isolation of extracellular vesicles is suitable for high-throughput proteomics
title_full_unstemmed Peptide-mediated ‘miniprep’ isolation of extracellular vesicles is suitable for high-throughput proteomics
title_short Peptide-mediated ‘miniprep’ isolation of extracellular vesicles is suitable for high-throughput proteomics
title_sort peptide-mediated ‘miniprep’ isolation of extracellular vesicles is suitable for high-throughput proteomics
topic Short Communication
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5988555/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29900106
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.euprot.2016.02.001
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