4.6 Article

Hollow organosilica beads as reference particles for optical detection of extracellular vesicles

Journal

JOURNAL OF THROMBOSIS AND HAEMOSTASIS
Volume 16, Issue 8, Pages 1646-1655

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jth.14193

Keywords

cell-derived microparticles; exosomes; extracellular vesicles; flow cytometry; microspheres

Funding

  1. National Research, Development and Innovation Office (Hungary) [PD 121326, NVKP_16-1-2016-0007]
  2. Janos Bolyai Research Fellowship of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences
  3. Cancer-ID program
  4. MEMPHISII program of the Netherlands Technology Foundation STW
  5. VENI program of the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research - Domain Applied and Engineering Sciences (NWO-TTW) [15924]

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Background: The concentration of extracellular vesicles (EVs) in body fluids is a promising biomarker for disease, and flow cytometry remains the clinically most applicable method to identify the cellular origin of single EVs in suspension. To compare concentration measurements of EVs between flow cytometers, solid polystyrene reference beads and EVs were distributed in the first ISTH-organized interlaboratory comparison studies. The beads were used to set size gates based on light scatter, and the concentration of EVs was measured within the size gates. However, polystyrene beads lead to false size determination of EVs, owing to the mismatch in refractive index between beads and EVs. Moreover, polystyrene beads gate different EV sizes on different flow cytometers. Objective: To prepare, characterize and test hollow organosilica beads (HOBs) as reference beads to set EV size gates in flow cytometry investigations. Methods: HOBs were prepared with a hard template solgel method, and extensively characterized for morphology, size, and colloidal stability. The applicability of HOBs as reference particles was investigated by flow cytometry with HOBs and platelet-derived EVs. Results: HOBs proved to be monodisperse with a homogeneous shell thickness. Two-angle light-scattering measurements by flow cytometry confirmed that HOBs have light-scattering properties similar to those of platelet-derived EVs. Conclusions: Because the structure and light-scattering properties HOBs resemble those of EVs, HOBs with a given size will gate EVs of the same size. Therefore, HOBs are ideal reference beads with which to standardize optical measurements of the EV concentration within a predefined size range.

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