Feasibility of urinary extracellular vesicle proteome profiling using a robust and simple, clinically applicable isolation method

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Abstract

Extracellular vesicles (EVs) secreted by prostate cancer (PCa) cells contain specific biomarkers and can be isolated from urine. Collection of urine is not invasive, and therefore urinary EVs represent a liquid biopsy for diagnostic and prognostic testing for PCa. In this study, we optimised urinary EV isolation using a method based on heat shock proteins and compared it to gold-standard ultracentrifugation. The urinary EV isolation protocol using the Vn96-peptide is easier, time convenient (≈1.5 h) and no special equipment is needed, in contrast to ultracentrifugation protocol (>3.5 h), making this protocol clinically feasible. We compared the isolated vesicles of both ultracentrifugation and Vn96-peptide by proteome profiling using mass spectrometry-based proteomics (n = 4 per method). We reached a depth of >3000 proteins, with 2400 proteins that were commonly detected in urinary EVs from different donors. We show a large overlap (>85%) between proteins identified in EVs isolated by ultracentrifugation and Vn96-peptide. Addition of the detergent NP40 to Vn96-peptide EV isolations reduced levels of background proteins and highly increased the levels of the EV-markers TSG101 and PDCD6IP, indicative of an increased EV yield. Thus, the Vn96-peptide-based EV isolation procedure is clinically feasibly and allows largescale protein profiling of urinary EV biomarkers.

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Bijnsdorp, I. V., Maxouri, O., Kardar, A., Schelfhorst, T., Piersma, S. R., Pham, T. V., … Jimenez, C. R. (2017). Feasibility of urinary extracellular vesicle proteome profiling using a robust and simple, clinically applicable isolation method. Journal of Extracellular Vesicles, 6(1). https://doi.org/10.1080/20013078.2017.1313091

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