Browsing by Subject "Extracellular vesicles"
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Item Open Access Acoustofluidic Manipulation for Diagnosis and Drug Loading(2021) Wang, ZeyuShowing increased application in biological and medical fields, acoustofluidics is a combined technology between acoustics and microfluidics. The core function of acoustofluidics is a label-free and contact-free manipulation of particles in the fluid, which can be applied as active separation, active mixing, and active concentration. Since in therapeutic and diagnostic applications, contamination in the samples can significantly interference analysis results and treatment outcome, proper per-screening of the sample can significantly decrease the target detection threshold and avoiding interferences come from noise and misreading. The acoustofluidic technology derive a particle manipulation based on physical properties of the particles and fluids, specifically, the size of the particle, densities for the particles and fluid, and the viscosity of the fluid, which generate a screening system that can separate particles with different sizes and densities. By utilizing this property, acoustofluidics has been applied on separating multiple biological particles and objects including circulating cancer cells, red blood cells, and multiple populations of vesicles. These reagent-free and contact-free separations have been demonstrated biocompatible for cells and vesicles and can conserve the cell viabilities and vesicle cargoes including DNA, miRNA, and proteins. However, current achievements on acoustofluidic manipulation focus on general analysis of the separated components, which are not disease specific biomarkers, and the body fluid using for separation are limited to blood and artificial isotonic solutions including phosphate-buffered saline. Although these works demonstrated acoustofluidic technology is eligible for separating bio-particles that have diagnosis and therapeutic functions, lack of real cases related applications and diseases specific investigations still make the technology’s application abilities being restricted to possibilities but not promised functions. To deeply investigate and demonstrate the acoustofluidic technology’s potential on diagnostic application, the technology was evaluated by using samples related with multiple specific diseases. Since the acoustofluidic technology has been demonstrated eligible for isolating exosomes, which are 50-200 nm vesicles secreted from cells, pathology related exosomes were selected for diagnostic application investigation. Exosomes’ vesicle structures make them ideal candidate for diagnosis, since vesicles formed by lipid bilayer membrane contain both proteins or nucleic acids as cargoes inside and transmembrane or membrane proteins and polysaccharides on the surface. Furthermore, the forming and secreting pathologies of exosomes are highly dependent on endocytosis and exocytosis pathologies, which are influenced by cellular metabolism. Exosomes’ cargoes have been found specifically correlated with secreting cells populations, indicates depending on types of cells, like tumor cells or stem cells, the secreted exosomes will contain different molecules that can be used as biomarkers for reversed identifying secreting cells. Except high values on biological and medical research and applications, exosomes’ small size makes the vesicles difficult for isolation and increase the cost on both equipment and time aspects. Since acoustofluidics provides an active approach for separating nanometer sized particles and the isolation is a continuous procedure, the simple and rapid exosome isolation the acoustofluidics can provide makes the technology high valuable. Considering these improvements, the acoustofluidics can provide on exosome related fields, demonstrating acoustofluidic devices separated exosomes containing disease biomarkers and could be used for diagnostic applications become a necessary step for validating the technology’s ability. In this dissertation, the first attempt for validating acoustofluidic exosome separation’s diagnostic potential was made for isolating salivary exosomes aimed at human papillomavirus (HPV) induced oropharyngeal cancer diagnosis. Different with previous research that worked on blood exosome separation, a unique property of this study is achieving exosome separation from saliva, which is a more unstable system on components and physical properties than blood. By isolating salivary exosome using the acoustofluidic technology and processing down-stream digital droplet polymerase chain reaction (PCR) analysis, HPV-16 virus, which has been found can induce oropharyngeal cancer, was found majorly distributed in isolated exosome fractions. Since saliva has complex components that cause inaccuracy analysis result, the application of acoustofluidic technology can increase the diagnostic sensitive and enable saliva based liquid biopsy for early screening of oropharyngeal cancer. In the next work, we further demonstrate the acoustofluidic technology’s advantage on rapid isolation of exosomes benefits the time sensitive diagnosis. The acoustofluidic devices were applied for isolating exosomes from mice models that were induced to traumatic brain injury (TBI), which can develop to chronic diseases or deteriorate in short term. Since these outcomes induced by improper or untimely treatments, fast screening of TBI becomes critical for achieving ideal therapeutic outcomes. By collecting plasma from mice and deriving exosome isolation through the acoustofluidics devices, isolated exosome samples with less contamination were found compared with original plasma. Protein analysis further indicates isolated exosomes keeps several exosome specific and neuron damage specific proteins, indicates the acoustofluidic technology is biocompatible and low harmful for exosome structures and components. High isolation purity achieved by the acoustofluidic technology also benefits downstream analysis by decreasing detection noise. In flow cytometer analysis, the acoustofluidic devices isolated exosomes demonstrated TBI disease biomarker increasing in 24 h after the mice were induced to TBI, while the plasma sample cannot demonstrate this tendency. The success of revealing early stage TBI biomarker changes indicates the acoustofluidic technology not only can benefit diagnosis, but also eligible for achieving diagnosis in a very early stage of the pathology. Since the acoustofluidic technology had demonstrated a promising performance on biocompatibility and rapid separation, other time-sensitive samples, including live virus was applied for evaluating the device’s performance. To achieve better control and eliminate irrelevant variable, we use cultured reverse transcription virus that is used for mammal cells transfection as target for isolation. The acoustofluidic technology showed reliable isolation of the murine leukemia virus and majority of the virus particles were separated out from the original sample. Virus viability was further validated robust based on the transfection experiments that using acoustofluidic separated virus and original virus samples demonstrated similar level transfection rates. This work indicates except vesicles like exosomes, the acoustofluidic technology is also eligible for isolating virus and keeping its viability, which significantly expands the application of the technology. Next, to expend the acoustofluidic technology’s functions, we utilized the concentration and manipulation ability of the device for deriving high efficiency membrane degradation. By generating strong microstreaming and microstreaming derived shear stress, the acoustofluidic devices can generate strong vertex flow fields in channel that can capture and lyse mammal cells. Since the acoustofluidic cell lysis is totally a physical process without participation of any chemical reagent and demonstrates a high lysis efficiency, this acoustofluidics application has potential for achieving high efficiency cell analysis. Since the acoustofluidic technology has demonstrated potential for concentration and lysis effect by generating high flow rate microstreaming vertex, we further investigated whether similar effect can derive exosome concentration and lysis. By generating acoustofluidic vertex in droplet containing exosome, nanoparticles, and small molecule drugs, exosome concentration and lysis effects were utilized for high efficiency drug loading and carrier encapsulation. Derived by the acoustofluidic concentration effect, the porous nanoparticles and drug molecules are concentrated in small area of the fluid system and this active concentration increasing induces a high drug loading rate. Simultaneously, the acoustofluidic vertex disrupts exosome membrane and concentrates exosomes with the nanoparticles, which induces exosome encapsulation. These exosome encapsulated drug-loaded nanoparticles demonstrate high intake rate of cells and derive more efficient drug delivery rate. Since the drug loading and exosome encapsulation are physical processes, the acoustofluidic technology derived particle manipulation has potential for deriving loading and encapsulation for large varieties of drugs, particles, and vesicles, which significantly expand the technology’s application.
Item Open Access Bacterial Extracellular Vesicles and the Plant Immune Response(2021) McMillan, Hannah MaryCells from all levels of life secrete vesicles, which are nanoscale proteoliposomes packaged with a variety of proteins, lipids, and small molecule cargo. Depending on their origin, these extracellular vesicles are termed exosomes, microvesicles, exomeres, and membrane vesicles, to list a few. Vesicles released from Gram-negative bacteria bud from the outer membrane and are, therefore, referred to as outer membrane vesicles (OMVs). In mammalian systems, OMVs facilitate bacterial survival by alleviating membrane stress, serving as a decoy for bacteriophage and antibiotics, and providing a fast membrane remodeling mechanism. OMVs also contribute to virulence by delivering toxins and other soluble and insoluble cargo to the host cell. The role OMVs play in plant systems remains unknown.
Previous studies revealed that plant pathogenic bacterial vesicles contain virulence factors, type III secretion system effectors, plant cell wall-degrading enzymes, and more, suggesting that vesicles may play similar roles to those from mammalian pathogens in host-pathogen interactions. Further, OMVs elicit several markers for pathogen-associated molecular pattern triggered immunity in plants. These responses include increased transcription of defense markers such as FRK1 and production of reactive oxygen species. Building on these findings, here we show that OMVs from the plant pathogen Pseudomonas syringae and the plant beneficial Pseudomonas fluorescens elicit plant immune responses in Arabidopsis thaliana that protect against future pathogen challenge. Intriguingly, protection is independent of salicylic acid plant defense pathways and bacterial type III secretion. OMVs also inhibit seedling growth, another indication of plant immune activation.
Our initial biochemical studies suggested that the immunogenic OMV cargo was larger than 10 kDa and differed between the pathogen and beneficial species despite similar plant immunity outcomes. Interestingly, protective OMV-mediated responses were protein-independent, while the seedling growth inhibition phenotype was entirely protein dependent. Proteomics analysis confirmed that OMV protein cargo differed between P. syringae and P. fluorescens. While media culture conditions did not dramatically impact the immunogenic activity of isolated OMVs from either species, proteomics analysis revealed a significant shift in P. syringae OMV cargo between complete and minimal media conditions. P. fluorescens OMV cargo was largely the same in the two media conditions, with no significantly enriched proteins in minimal or complete media. Further analysis of the proteins enriched in the P. syringae minimal OMV condition identified one set of proteins with the same baseline abundance in P. syringae and P. fluorescens complete OMVs and another set with a lower baseline abundance compared to P. fluorescens OMVs. These two subsets could contribute to virulence and stress tolerance, respectively. Enrichment analysis uncovered particularly interesting protein categories in the subset with the same baseline abundance. Of interest, several lipoprotein and lipid binding categories were enriched, and proteins involved in synthesis of the phytotoxin coronatine were also enriched in this same-baseline subset. These results support our hypothesis that proteins enriched in P. syringae minimal OMVs with the same baseline abundance in P. fluorescens complete OMVs may contribute to OMV-mediated bacterial virulence in plants. Our findings also suggest that our forthcoming OMV metabolomic analyses may reveal non-proteinaceous cargo that is critical for OMV-mediated plant immune activation.
The work presented here lays the groundwork for future exploration of OMV-plant interactions and adds a new layer of complexity to plant-bacteria interactions. Further, these results reveal that OMVs elicit complex plant immune responses that would be difficult for pathogens to adapt to and overcome, supporting a role for bacterial OMVs in agricultural applications to promote durable resistance and revealing a new potential avenue for disease prevention and management.
Item Open Access Proteomic analysis of urinary extracellular vesicles reveal biomarkers for neurologic disease.(EBioMedicine, 2019-07) Wang, Shijie; Kojima, Kyoko; Mobley, James A; West, Andrew BBACKGROUND:Extracellular vesicles (EVs) harbor thousands of proteins that hold promise for biomarker development. Usually difficult to purify, EVs in urine are relatively easily obtained and have demonstrated efficacy for kidney disease prediction. Herein, we further characterize the proteome of urinary EVs to explore the potential for biomarkers unrelated to kidney dysfunction, focusing on Parkinson's disease (PD). METHODS:Using a quantitative mass spectrometry approach, we measured urinary EV proteins from a discovery cohort of 50 subjects. EVs in urine were classified into subgroups and EV proteins were ranked by abundance and variability over time. Enriched pathways and ontologies in stable EV proteins were identified and proteins that predict PD were further measured in a cohort of 108 subjects. FINDINGS:Hundreds of commonly expressed urinary EV proteins with stable expression over time were distinguished from proteins with high variability. Bioinformatic analyses reveal a striking enrichment of endolysosomal proteins linked to Parkinson's, Alzheimer's, and Huntington's disease. Tissue and biofluid enrichment analyses show broad representation of EVs from across the body without bias towards kidney or urine proteins. Among the proteins linked to neurological diseases, SNAP23 and calbindin were the most elevated in PD cases with 86% prediction success for disease diagnosis in the discovery cohort and 76% prediction success in the replication cohort. INTERPRETATION:Urinary EVs are an underutilized but highly accessible resource for biomarker discovery with particular promise for neurological diseases like PD.Item Open Access Secretion and delivery of bacteria-derived immunomodulatory RNA and DNA via extracellular membrane vesicles(2021) Rodriguez, Blanca VictoriaNucleic acids produced by the human pathogen, Staphylococcus aureus, have become increasingly recognized as important pathogen-associated molecular patterns capable of eliciting Type I Interferon (IFN) signaling in host cells. Intracellular Toll-like receptors (TLRs) have been identified as sensors of S. aureus-derived RNA and DNA. However, there is a lack of mechanistic insight into how S. aureus secretes nucleic acids and how nucleic acids derived from S. aureus—which is classified as an extracellular pathogen—are transported into host cells to activate TLRs to modulate host cell functions. Recent studies have uncovered extracellular membrane vesicles (MVs) produced by bacteria as a novel secretion mechanism for biologically active RNA and DNA. These findings raised the intriguing possibility of a new paradigm in bacterial secretion whereby MVs act as a vehicle for both local and distant delivery of regulatory and immunomodulatory RNA and DNA to target cells. As such, we hypothesized that MVs secreted by S. aureus could represent an important source of functional and structurally relevant bacterial RNA and DNA molecules that modulate the host immune response. Through biochemical analysis of S. aureus MVs and their nucleic acid cargo, we found that subpopulations of MV-associated RNA and DNA can withstand nuclease degradation. We report that in cultured mouse macrophages, IFN-β mRNA is induced by S. aureus MVs and that MV-induced IFN-β expression is specifically promoted by activation of endosomal TLR3, TLR7, and TLR9 receptors—pointing to the likelihood that MV-associated, protected RNA and DNA are inducing such a response. By metabolically labeling S. aureus RNA in culture and imaging the resultant MVs using super-resolution microscopy, we provide visual evidence that MVs and their stably associated RNA cargo are internalized by macrophages. Our work suggests that both unprotected and protected S. aureus MV-associated RNA and DNA molecules induce significant responses in host cells, but do so by different pathways, and that these differences could have important functional consequences. Altogether, we provide the first piece of evidence that S. aureus releases MVs laden with RNA and DNA molecules that are internalized by host immune cells to induce IFN-β via TLR-dependent signaling. These novel insights could promote the development of novel therapeutic strategies for the treatment of staphylococcal disease.