4.8 Article

Industrial By-Products As a Novel Circular Source of Biocompatible Extracellular Vesicles

Journal

ADVANCED FUNCTIONAL MATERIALS
Volume 32, Issue 29, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/adfm.202202700

Keywords

circular economy; extracellular vesicles; food industry by-products; lipidomics; mass spectrometry; nanocarriers; proteomics

Funding

  1. Research and Education Council of the Community of Madrid, Spain [2018-T1/BIO-10633]
  2. Ministry of Science and Innovation, Spain [PID2020114885RB-C21]
  3. Carlos III Institute of Health (ISCIII), Spain [PI20/00623]
  4. Talento Program 2018 of the Community of Madrid
  5. Sara Borrell postdoctoral program of the Instituto de Salud Carlos III (ISCIII, Spain) [CD19/00243]
  6. Miguel Servet tenure track program of the Instituto de Salud Carlos III (ISCIII, Spain) [CP21/00096]
  7. European Union Funds (ISCIII Miguel Servet Program 2021 - Fondo Social Europeo Plus, FSE+)
  8. Miguel Servet program [CPII20/00007]
  9. Regional Ministry of Science, Universities and Innovation of the Community of Madrid
  10. European Social Fund for the recruitment of predoctoral researchers [PEJD-2019-PRE/BIO-16475]
  11. CERCA Program/Generalitat de Catalunya

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This study explores and defines the use of food industry by-products as a sustainable and safe source of biocompatible extracellular vesicles. The vesicles have a large yield of exosomes, high abundance of membrane lipids, and complex proteomes resembling those in human blood plasma. The biocompatible vesicles show excellent oral and intravenous bioavailability, as well as specific organ targeting capacity.
Extracellular vesicles (EVs) constitute an intricate system of molecular exchange that has recently gained tremendous interest. However, sustainable sources of safe biological EVs remain scarce and elusive. This study explores and defines the use of food industry by-products (BP) as a circular source of safe biocompatible EVs. Averaged diameter and molecular compositions indicate a large yield of exosomes and high abundancy of membrane lipids with signaling capacity in these vesicles. Complex proteomes mimicking those circulating in human blood plasma are also identified. Furthermore, BP-EVs do not show relevant cytotoxicity and display excellent oral and intravenous bioavailability together with specific organ targeting capacity. Collectively, it is believed that the novel findings reported here will open substantial venues for the use of BP as an optimal source of biocompatible nanovesicles in manifold applications of the biotechnological and biomedical fields.

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