Avtor/Urednik     Holcar, Marija; Kandušer, Maša; Lenassi, Metka
Naslov     Blood nanoparticles - influence on extracellular vesicle isolation and characterization
Tip     članek
Vol. in št.     , št. Vol. 12
Leto izdaje     2021
Obseg     str. 1-20
ISSN     1663-9812 - Frontiers in pharmacology
Jezik     eng
Abstrakt     Blood is a rich source of disease biomarkers, which include extracellular vesicles (EVs). EVs are nanometer-to micrometer-sized spherical particles that are enclosed by a phospholipid bilayer and are secreted by most cell types. EVs reflect the physiological cell of origin in terms of their molecular composition and biophysical characteristics, and they accumulate in blood even when released from remote organs or tissues, while protecting their cargo from degradation. The molecular components (e.g., proteins, miRNAs) and biophysical characteristics (e.g., size, concentration) of blood EVs have been studied as biomarkers of cancers and neurodegenerative, autoimmune, and cardiovascular diseases. However, most biomarker studies do not address the problem of contaminants in EV isolates from blood plasma, and how these might affect downstream EV analysis. Indeed, nonphysiological EVs, protein aggregates, lipoproteins and viruses share many molecular and/or biophysical characteristics with EVs, and can therefore co-isolate with EVs from blood plasma. Consequently, isolation and downstream analysis of EVs from blood plasma remain a unique challenge, with important impacts on the outcomes of biomarker studies. To help improve rigor, reproducibility, and reliability of EV biomarker studies, we describe here the major contaminants of EV isolates from blood plasma, and we report on how different EV isolation methods affect their levels, and how contaminants that remain can affect the interpretation of downstream EV analysis.
Proste vsebinske oznake     extracellular vesicles
blood nanoparticles
contaminants
ekstracelularni vezikli
krvni nanodelci
kontaminanti