Evaluation of serum extracellular vesicle isolation methods for profiling miRNAs by next-generation sequencing

Extracellular vesicles (EVs) are intercellular communicators with key functions in physiological and pathological processes and have recently garnered interest because of their diagnostic and therapeutic potential. The past decade has brought about the development and commercialization of a wide arr...

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Main Authors: Dominik Buschmann, Benedikt Kirchner, Stefanie Hermann, Melanie Märte, Christine Wurmser, Florian Brandes, Stefan Kotschote, Michael Bonin, Ortrud K. Steinlein, Michael W. Pfaffl, Gustav Schelling, Marlene Reithmair
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2018-12-01
Series:Journal of Extracellular Vesicles
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/20013078.2018.1481321
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spelling doaj-c0ec0668fcab4525bb2829fcb03a5de32020-11-24T21:53:30ZengTaylor & Francis GroupJournal of Extracellular Vesicles2001-30782018-12-017110.1080/20013078.2018.14813211481321Evaluation of serum extracellular vesicle isolation methods for profiling miRNAs by next-generation sequencingDominik Buschmann0Benedikt Kirchner1Stefanie Hermann2Melanie Märte3Christine Wurmser4Florian Brandes5Stefan Kotschote6Michael Bonin7Ortrud K. Steinlein8Michael W. Pfaffl9Gustav Schelling10Marlene Reithmair11University Hospital, LMU MunichTechnical University of MunichTechnical University of MunichUniversity Hospital, LMU MunichTechnical University of MunichUniversity Hospital, LMU MunichIMGM Laboratories GmbHIMGM Laboratories GmbHUniversity Hospital, LMU MunichTechnical University of MunichUniversity Hospital, LMU MunichUniversity Hospital, LMU MunichExtracellular vesicles (EVs) are intercellular communicators with key functions in physiological and pathological processes and have recently garnered interest because of their diagnostic and therapeutic potential. The past decade has brought about the development and commercialization of a wide array of methods to isolate EVs from serum. Which subpopulations of EVs are captured strongly depends on the isolation method, which in turn determines how suitable resulting samples are for various downstream applications. To help clinicians and scientists choose the most appropriate approach for their experiments, isolation methods need to be comparatively characterized. Few attempts have been made to comprehensively analyse vesicular microRNAs (miRNAs) in patient biofluids for biomarker studies. To address this discrepancy, we set out to benchmark the performance of several isolation principles for serum EVs in healthy individuals and critically ill patients. Here, we compared five different methods of EV isolation in combination with two RNA extraction methods regarding their suitability for biomarker discovery-focused miRNA sequencing as well as biological characteristics of captured vesicles. Our findings reveal striking method-specific differences in both the properties of isolated vesicles and the ability of associated miRNAs to serve in biomarker research. While isolation by precipitation and membrane affinity was highly suitable for miRNA-based biomarker discovery, methods based on size-exclusion chromatography failed to separate patients from healthy volunteers. Isolated vesicles differed in size, quantity, purity and composition, indicating that each method captured distinctive populations of EVs as well as additional contaminants. Even though the focus of this work was on transcriptomic profiling of EV-miRNAs, our insights also apply to additional areas of research. We provide guidance for navigating the multitude of EV isolation methods available today and help researchers and clinicians make an informed choice about which strategy to use for experiments involving critically ill patients.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/20013078.2018.1481321Extracellular vesicleexosome isolationmiRNAsmall RNA sequencingnext-generation sequencingsepsisbiomarkerprecipitationultracentrifugation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Dominik Buschmann
Benedikt Kirchner
Stefanie Hermann
Melanie Märte
Christine Wurmser
Florian Brandes
Stefan Kotschote
Michael Bonin
Ortrud K. Steinlein
Michael W. Pfaffl
Gustav Schelling
Marlene Reithmair
spellingShingle Dominik Buschmann
Benedikt Kirchner
Stefanie Hermann
Melanie Märte
Christine Wurmser
Florian Brandes
Stefan Kotschote
Michael Bonin
Ortrud K. Steinlein
Michael W. Pfaffl
Gustav Schelling
Marlene Reithmair
Evaluation of serum extracellular vesicle isolation methods for profiling miRNAs by next-generation sequencing
Journal of Extracellular Vesicles
Extracellular vesicle
exosome isolation
miRNA
small RNA sequencing
next-generation sequencing
sepsis
biomarker
precipitation
ultracentrifugation
author_facet Dominik Buschmann
Benedikt Kirchner
Stefanie Hermann
Melanie Märte
Christine Wurmser
Florian Brandes
Stefan Kotschote
Michael Bonin
Ortrud K. Steinlein
Michael W. Pfaffl
Gustav Schelling
Marlene Reithmair
author_sort Dominik Buschmann
title Evaluation of serum extracellular vesicle isolation methods for profiling miRNAs by next-generation sequencing
title_short Evaluation of serum extracellular vesicle isolation methods for profiling miRNAs by next-generation sequencing
title_full Evaluation of serum extracellular vesicle isolation methods for profiling miRNAs by next-generation sequencing
title_fullStr Evaluation of serum extracellular vesicle isolation methods for profiling miRNAs by next-generation sequencing
title_full_unstemmed Evaluation of serum extracellular vesicle isolation methods for profiling miRNAs by next-generation sequencing
title_sort evaluation of serum extracellular vesicle isolation methods for profiling mirnas by next-generation sequencing
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Journal of Extracellular Vesicles
issn 2001-3078
publishDate 2018-12-01
description Extracellular vesicles (EVs) are intercellular communicators with key functions in physiological and pathological processes and have recently garnered interest because of their diagnostic and therapeutic potential. The past decade has brought about the development and commercialization of a wide array of methods to isolate EVs from serum. Which subpopulations of EVs are captured strongly depends on the isolation method, which in turn determines how suitable resulting samples are for various downstream applications. To help clinicians and scientists choose the most appropriate approach for their experiments, isolation methods need to be comparatively characterized. Few attempts have been made to comprehensively analyse vesicular microRNAs (miRNAs) in patient biofluids for biomarker studies. To address this discrepancy, we set out to benchmark the performance of several isolation principles for serum EVs in healthy individuals and critically ill patients. Here, we compared five different methods of EV isolation in combination with two RNA extraction methods regarding their suitability for biomarker discovery-focused miRNA sequencing as well as biological characteristics of captured vesicles. Our findings reveal striking method-specific differences in both the properties of isolated vesicles and the ability of associated miRNAs to serve in biomarker research. While isolation by precipitation and membrane affinity was highly suitable for miRNA-based biomarker discovery, methods based on size-exclusion chromatography failed to separate patients from healthy volunteers. Isolated vesicles differed in size, quantity, purity and composition, indicating that each method captured distinctive populations of EVs as well as additional contaminants. Even though the focus of this work was on transcriptomic profiling of EV-miRNAs, our insights also apply to additional areas of research. We provide guidance for navigating the multitude of EV isolation methods available today and help researchers and clinicians make an informed choice about which strategy to use for experiments involving critically ill patients.
topic Extracellular vesicle
exosome isolation
miRNA
small RNA sequencing
next-generation sequencing
sepsis
biomarker
precipitation
ultracentrifugation
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/20013078.2018.1481321
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