4.7 Article

Optimization of small extracellular vesicle isolation from expressed prostatic secretions in urine for in-depth proteomic analysis

Journal

JOURNAL OF EXTRACELLULAR VESICLES
Volume 11, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/jev2.12184

Keywords

biomarkers; EPS-urine; expressed prostatic secretions in urine; extracellular vesicle; mass spectrometry; prostate cancer; proteomics; Tamm-Horsfall protein; urine; uromodulin

Categories

Funding

  1. National Cancer Institute [U01CA214194]

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Isolation and analysis of extracellular vesicles (EVs) from urine samples is a common strategy for studying vesicle biology and biomarker discovery. However, standard EV isolation methods often co-isolate protein contaminants and high levels of uromodulin (THP) in urine can reduce EV yield. In this study, a modified isolation method was developed to improve EV isolation and enrich prostate cancer-associated EV-resident proteins.
The isolation and subsequent molecular analysis of extracellular vesicles (EVs) derived from patient samples is a widely used strategy to understand vesicle biology and to facilitate biomarker discovery. Expressed prostatic secretions in urine are a tumor proximal fluid that has received significant attention as a source of potential prostate cancer (PCa) biomarkers for use in liquid biopsy protocols. Standard EV isolation methods like differential ultracentrifugation (dUC) co-isolate protein contaminants that mask lower-abundance proteins in typical mass spectrometry (MS) protocols. Further complicating the analysis of expressed prostatic secretions, uromodulin, also known as Tamm-Horsfall protein (THP), is present at high concentrations in urine. THP can form polymers that entrap EVs during purification, reducing yield. Disruption of THP polymer networks with dithiothreitol (DTT) can release trapped EVs, but smaller THP fibres co-isolate with EVs during subsequent ultracentrifugation. To resolve these challenges, we describe here a dUC method that incorporates THP polymer reduction and alkaline washing to improve EV isolation and deplete both THP and other common protein contaminants. When applied to human expressed prostatic secretions in urine, we achieved relative enrichment of known prostate and prostate cancer-associated EV-resident proteins. Our approach provides a promising strategy for global proteomic analyses of urinary EVs.

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