Assessing Extracellular Vesicles in Human Biofluids Using Flow‐Based Analyzers

Author:

Yim Kevin Ho Wai1,Krzyzaniak Olga1,Al Hrout Ala'a1,Peacock Ben2,Chahwan Richard1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Experimental Immunology University of Zurich Zurich 8057 Switzerland

2. NanoFCM, ltd. D6 Thane Rd Nottingham NG90 6BH UK

Abstract

AbstractExtracellular vesicles (EVs) are increasingly being analyzed by flow cytometry. Yet their minuscule size and low refractive index cause the scatter intensity of most EVs to fall below the detection limit of most flow cytometers. A new class of devices, known as spectral flow analyzers, are becoming standards in cell phenotyping studies, largely due to their unique capacity to detect a vast panel of markers with higher sensitivity for light scatter detection. Another class of devices, known as nano‐analyzers, provides high‐resolution detection of sub‐micron‐sized particles. Here, the EV phenotyping performance between the Aurora (Cytek) spectral cell analyzer and the NanoFCM (nFCM) nanoflow analyzer are compared. These two devices are specifically chosen given their lead in becoming gold standards in their respective fields. Immune cell‐derived EVs remain poorly characterized despite their clinical potential. Therefore, B‐ and T‐cell line‐derived EVs and donor‐matched human biofluid‐derived EVs from plasma, urine, and saliva are used in combination with a panel of established immune markers for this comparative study. A comparative evaluation of both cytometry platforms is performed, discussing their potential and suitability for different applications. It is found that nFCM can accurately i) analyze small EVs (40−200 nm) matching the size accuracy of electron microscopy; ii) measure the concentration of a single EV particle per volume; iii) identify underrepresented EV marker subsets; and iv) provide co‐localization of EV surface markers. It can also be shown that human sample biofluids have unique EV marker signatures that can have future clinical relevance. Finally, nFCM and Aurora have their unique strength, preferred fashion of data acquisition, and visualization to fit different research interests.

Funder

Novartis Foundation

Schweizerischer Nationalfonds zur Förderung der Wissenschaftlichen Forschung

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Pharmaceutical Science,Biomedical Engineering,Biomaterials

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