4.5 Article

A method of separating extracellular vesicles from blood shows potential clinical translation, and reveals extracellular vesicle cargo gremlin-1 as a diagnostic biomarker

Journal

TRANSLATIONAL ONCOLOGY
Volume 15, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.tranon.2021.101274

Keywords

Extracellular vesicles; breast cancer; Clinical utility; standard-of-care; Gremlin-1

Categories

Funding

  1. Irish Research Council Advanced Laureate Award [IRCLA/2019/49]
  2. Clinical Cancer Research Trust (Ireland)
  3. Carrick Therapeutics [TCDLOD001]

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Extracellular vesicles (EVs) have shown potential as minimally invasive biomarkers. This study compared six EV separation methods and found that a CD63/CD81/CD9-coated immunobead-based method was most suitable, allowing for the detection of significantly higher levels of EVs and their gremlin-1 cargo in breast cancer patients.
Extracellular vesicles (EVs) have potential as minimally invasive biomarkers. However, the methods most commonly used for EV retrieval rely on ultracentrifugation, are time-consuming, and unrealistic to translate to standard-of-care. We sought a method suitable for EV separation from blood that could be used in patient care. Sera from breast cancer patients and age-matched controls (n = 27 patients; n = 36 controls) were analysed to compare 6 proposed EV separation methods. The EVs were then characterised on 8 parameters. The selected method was subsequently applied to independent cohorts of sera (n = 20 patients; n = 20 controls), as proof-of-principle, investigating EVs' gremlin-1 cargo. Three independent runs with each method were very reproducible, within each given method. All isolates contained EVs, although they varied in quantity and purity. Methods that require ultracentrifugation were not superior for low volumes of sera typically available in routine standard-of care. A CD63/CD81/CD9-coated immunobead-based method was most suitable based on EV markers' detection and minimal albumin and lipoprotein contamination. Applying this method to independent sera cohorts, EVs and their gremlin-1 cargo were at significantly higher amounts for breast cancer patients compared to controls. In conclusion, CD63/CD81/CD9-coated immunobeads may enable clinical utility of blood-based EVs as biomarkers.

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