Double Digital Assay for Single Extracellular Vesicle and Single Molecule Detection

Author:

Reynolds David E.1,Pan Menghan1,Yang Jingbo2,Galanis George1,Roh Yoon Ho1,Morales Renee‐Tyler T.1,Kumar Shailesh Senthil1,Heo Su‐Jin13,Xu Xiaowei2,Guo Wei4,Ko Jina12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Bioengineering University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia PA 19104 USA

2. Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia PA 19104 USA

3. Department of Orthopaedic Surgery Perelman School of Medicine University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia PA 19104 USA

4. Department of Biology School of Arts and Sciences University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia PA 19104 USA

Abstract

AbstractExtracellular vesicles (EVs) have emerged as a promising source of biomarkers for disease diagnosis. However, current diagnostic methods for EVs present formidable challenges, given the low expression levels of biomarkers carried by EV samples, as well as their complex physical and biological properties. Herein, a highly sensitive double digital assay is developed that allows for the absolute quantification of individual molecules from a single EV. Because the relative abundance of proteins is low for a single EV, tyramide signal amplification (TSA) is integrated to increase the fluorescent signal readout for evaluation. With the integrative microfluidic technology, the technology's ability to compartmentalize single EVs is successfully demonstrated, proving the technology's digital partitioning capacity. Then the device is applied to detect single PD‐L1 proteins from single EVs derived from a melanoma cell line and it is discovered that there are ≈2.7 molecules expressed per EV, demonstrating the applicability of the system for profiling important prognostic and diagnostic cancer biomarkers for therapy response, metastatic status, and tumor progression. The ability to accurately quantify protein molecules of rare abundance from individual EVs will shed light on the understanding of EV heterogeneity and discovery of EV subtypes as new biomarkers.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Physics and Astronomy,General Engineering,Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology (miscellaneous),General Materials Science,General Chemical Engineering,Medicine (miscellaneous)

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