Uptake Profiles of Human Serum Exosomes by Murine and Human Tumor
Cells through Combined Use of Colloidal Nanoplasmonics and Flow Cytofluorimetric
Analysis
posted on 2018-06-05, 00:00authored bySara Busatto, Arianna Giacomini, Costanza Montis, Roberto Ronca, Paolo Bergese
Understanding
extracellular vesicle (EV) internalization mechanisms
and pathways in cells is of capital importance for both EV basic biology
and clinical translation, but still presents analytical hurdles, such
as undetermined purity grade and/or concentration of the EV samples
and lack of standard protocols. We report an accessible, robust, and
versatile method for resolving dose-dependent uptake profiles of exosomesthe
nanosized (30–150 nm) subtypes of EVs of intracellular origin
which are more intensively investigated for diagnostic and therapeutic
applicationsby cultured cells. The method is based on incubating
recipient cells with consistently increasing doses of exosomes which
are graded for purity and titrated by a COlorimetric NANoplasmonic
(CONAN) assay followed by cell flow cytofluorimetric analysis. The
proposed method allowed evaluation and comparison of the uptake of
human serum exosomes by cancer cell lines of murine (TRAMP-C2) and
human (LNCaP, DU145, MDA-MB-231, and A375) origin, setting a firmer
footing for better characterization and understanding of exosome biology
in different in vitro and (potentially) in vivo models of cancer growth.