4.1 Article

The isolation of morphologically intact and biologically active extracellular vesicles from the secretome of cancer-associated adipose tissue

Journal

CELL ADHESION & MIGRATION
Volume 11, Issue 2, Pages 196-204

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/19336918.2017.1279784

Keywords

aggregation; breast cancer; characterization; exosomes; function; isolation; proliferation

Categories

Funding

  1. Fund for Scientific Spearheads of the Ghent University Hospital, Concerted Research Actions from Ghent University
  2. National Cancer Plan [KPC_29_012]
  3. Kom op tegen Kanker
  4. Fund for Scientific Research-Flanders

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Breast cancer cells closely interact with different cell types of the surrounding adipose tissue to favor invasive growth and metastasis. Extracellular vesicles (EVs) are nanometer-sized vesicles secreted by different cell types that shuttle proteins and nucleic acids to establish cell-cell communication. To study the role of EVs released by cancer-associated adipose tissue in breast cancer progression and metastasis a standardized EV isolation protocol that obtains pure EVs and maintains their functional characteristics is required. We implemented differential ultracentrifugation as a pre-enrichment step followed by OptiPrep density gradient centrifugation (dUC-ODG) to isolate EVs from the conditioned medium of cancer-associated adipose tissue. A combination of immune-electron microscopy, nanoparticle tracking analysis (NTA) and Western blot analysis identified EVs that are enriched in flotillin-1, CD9 and CD63, and sized between 20 and 200 nm with a density of 1.076-1.125g/ml. The lack of protein aggregates and cell organelle proteins confirmed the purity of the EV preparations. Next, we evaluated whether dUC-ODG isolated EVs are functionally active. ZR75.1 breast cancer cells treated with cancer-associated adipose tissue-secreted EVs from breast cancer patients showed an increased phosphorylation of CREB. MCF-7 breast cancer cells treated with adipose tissue-derived EVs exhibited a stronger propensity to form cellular aggregates. In conclusion, dUC-ODG purifies EVs from conditioned medium of cancer-associated adipose tissue, and these EVs are morphologically intact and biologically active.

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