Direct isolation of circulating extracellular vesicles from blood for vascular risk profiling in type 2 diabetes mellitus.
Hui Min TaySheng Yuan LeongXiaohan XuFang KongMegha UpadyaRinkoo DalanChor Yong TayMing DaoSubra SureshHan Wei HouPublished in: Lab on a chip (2021)
Extracellular vesicles (EVs) are key mediators of communication among cells, and clinical utilities of EVs-based biomarkers remain limited due to difficulties in isolating EVs from whole blood reliably. We report a novel inertial-based microfluidic platform for direct isolation of nanoscale EVs (exosomes, 50 to 200 nm) and medium-sized EVs (microvesicles, 200 nm to 1 μm) from blood with high efficiency (three-fold increase in EV yield compared to ultracentrifugation). In a pilot clinical study of healthy (n = 5) and type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM, n = 9) subjects, we detected higher EV levels in T2DM patients (P < 0.05), and identified a subset of "high-risk" T2DM subjects with abnormally high (∼10-fold to 50-fold) amounts of platelet (CD41a+) or leukocyte-derived (CD45+) EVs. Our in vitro endothelial cell assay further revealed that EVs from "high-risk" T2DM subjects induced significantly higher vascular inflammation (ICAM-1 expression) (P < 0.05) as compared to healthy and non-"high-risk" T2DM subjects, reflecting a pro-inflammatory phenotype. Overall, the EV isolation tool is scalable, and requires less manual labour, cost and processing time. This enables further development of EV-based diagnostics, whereby a combined immunological and functional phenotyping strategy can potentially be used for rapid vascular risk stratification in T2DM.
Keyphrases
- glycemic control
- high throughput
- high efficiency
- single cell
- end stage renal disease
- endothelial cells
- oxidative stress
- photodynamic therapy
- induced apoptosis
- type diabetes
- chronic kidney disease
- stem cells
- mesenchymal stem cells
- high glucose
- newly diagnosed
- peripheral blood
- clinical trial
- metabolic syndrome
- bone marrow
- high resolution
- peritoneal dialysis
- adipose tissue
- cell proliferation
- binding protein
- diabetic rats
- cardiovascular risk factors
- patient reported outcomes
- quantum dots