Nanoscale Horizons 2018-04-04

None of us is the same as all of us: resolving the heterogeneity of extracellular vesicles using single-vesicle, nanoscale characterization with resonance enhanced atomic force microscope infrared spectroscopy (AFM-IR)

Sally Yunsun Kim, Dipesh Khanal, Priyanka Tharkar, Bill Kalionis, Wojciech Chrzanowski

Index: 10.1039/C8NH00048D

Full Text: HTML

Abstract

Extracellular vesicles (EVs) are highly specialized, nanoscale messengers that deliver biological signals and in doing so mediate intercellular communication. Increasing evidence shows that within populations of EVs, important properties including morphology, membrane composition, and content vary substantially. This heterogeneity arises in response to the nature, state, and environmental conditions of the cell source. However, currently there are no effective approaches, which unequivocally discriminate differences between individual EVs, which critically hampers progress in this emerging scientific area. Measuring EV heterogeneity is paramount to our understanding of how EVs influence the physiological and pathological functions of their target cells. Moreover, understanding EV heterogeneity is essential for their application as diagnostics and therapeutics. We propose an innovative approach using resonance enhanced atomic force microscope infrared spectroscopy (AFM-IR) to identify the nanoscale structural composition of EVs, as demonstrated and validated using EVs derived from two types of placenta stem cells. The particular strength of this approach is that it is a label-free and ultra-high sensitivity technique that has the power to measure individual EV heterogeneity. New insights gained by this method into EV heterogeneity will have a profound impact not only on our basic understanding of EV biology but also on disease diagnostics and the emerging area of EV-therapies.

Latest Articles:

pH-Triggered Self-assembly and Hydrogelation of Cyclic Peptide Nanotubes Confined in Water Micro-droplets

2018-04-03

[10.1039/C8NH00009C]

‘Painting’ nanostructured metals—playing with liquid metal

2018-04-03

[10.1039/C8NH00045J]

Understanding charge transfer and recombination by interface engineering for improving the efficiency of PbS quantum dot solar cells

2018-03-26

[10.1039/C8NH00030A]

Reassessment of long circulation via monitoring of integral polymeric nanoparticles justifies a more accurate understanding

2018-03-22

[10.1039/C8NH00010G]

Improving analyte selectivity by post-assembly modification of metal–organic framework based photonic crystal sensors

2018-03-16

[10.1039/C7NH00209B]

More Articles...