High-fidelity detection and sorting of nanoscale vesicles in viral disease and cancer.
Aizea Morales-KastresanaThomas A MusichJoshua A WelshWilliam TelfordThorsten DembergJames C S WoodMarty BigosCarley D RossAliaksander KachynskiAlan DeanEdward J FeltonJonathan Van DykeJohn TiggesVasilis ToxavidisDavid R ParksW Roy OvertonAparna H KesarwalaGordon J FreemanAriel RosnerStephen P PerfettoLise PasquetMasaki TerabeKatherine McKinnonVeena KapoorJane B TrepelAnu PuriHisataka KobayashiBryant C YungXiaoyuan Shawn ChenPeter GuionPeter ChoykeSusan J KnoxIonita H GhiranMarjorie Robert-GuroffJay A BerzofskyJennifer C JonesPublished in: Journal of extracellular vesicles (2019)
Biological nanoparticles, including viruses and extracellular vesicles (EVs), are of interest to many fields of medicine as biomarkers and mediators of or treatments for disease. However, exosomes and small viruses fall below the detection limits of conventional flow cytometers due to the overlap of particle-associated scattered light signals with the detection of background instrument noise from diffusely scattered light. To identify, sort, and study distinct subsets of EVs and other nanoparticles, as individual particles, we developed nanoscale Fluorescence Analysis and Cytometric Sorting (nanoFACS) methods to maximise information and material that can be obtained with high speed, high resolution flow cytometers. This nanoFACS method requires analysis of the instrument background noise (herein defined as the "reference noise"). With these methods, we demonstrate detection of tumour cell-derived EVs with specific tumour antigens using both fluorescence and scattered light parameters. We further validated the performance of nanoFACS by sorting two distinct HIV strains to >95% purity and confirmed the viability (infectivity) and molecular specificity (specific cell tropism) of biological nanomaterials sorted with nanoFACS. This nanoFACS method provides a unique way to analyse and sort functional EV- and viral-subsets with preservation of vesicular structure, surface protein specificity and RNA cargo activity.
Keyphrases
- high speed
- loop mediated isothermal amplification
- high resolution
- atomic force microscopy
- real time pcr
- label free
- air pollution
- sars cov
- single molecule
- escherichia coli
- stem cells
- healthcare
- hiv positive
- single cell
- mass spectrometry
- dendritic cells
- small molecule
- cell therapy
- hiv infected
- young adults
- papillary thyroid
- tandem mass spectrometry
- structural basis
- protein protein
- lymph node metastasis
- genetic diversity
- childhood cancer
- nucleic acid
- quantum dots
- liquid chromatography