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Adsorption of extracellular vesicles onto the tube walls during storage in solution
Author(s) -
Evgeniy G. Evtushenko,
Dmitry Bagrov,
В. Н. Лазарев,
M. A. Livshits,
Elena Khomyakova
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
plos one
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.99
H-Index - 332
ISSN - 1932-6203
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pone.0243738
Subject(s) - adsorption , nanoparticle tracking analysis , centrifugation , particle (ecology) , chromatography , vesicle , extracellular vesicles , tube (container) , diffusion , chemistry , bovine serum albumin , nanoparticle , biophysics , chemical engineering , materials science , nanotechnology , biochemistry , biology , physics , composite material , organic chemistry , membrane , thermodynamics , microbiology and biotechnology , ecology , microrna , microvesicles , engineering , gene
Short term storage of extracellular vesicle (EV) solutions at +4°C is a common practice, but the stability of EVs during this procedure has not been fully understood yet. Using nanoparticle tracking analysis, we have shown that EVs isolated from the conditioned medium of HT-29 cells exhibit a pronounced concentration decrease when stored in PBS in ordinary polypropylene tubes within the range of (0.5–2.1) × 10 10 particles/ml. EV losses reach 51±3% for 0.5 ml of EVs in Eppendorf 2 ml tube at 48 hours of storage at +4°C. Around 2/3 of the observed losses have been attributed to the adsorption of vesicles onto tube walls. This result shows that the lower part (up to at least 2 × 10 10 particles/ml) of the practically relevant concentration range for purified EVs is prone to adsorption losses at +4°C. Total particle losses could be reduced to 18–21% at 48 hours by using either Eppendorf Protein LoBind tubes or ordinary tubes with the surface blocked with bovine serum albumin or EVs. Reduction of losses to 15% has been shown for isolated EVs dissolved in the supernatant after 100 000 g centrifugation as a model of conditioned medium. Also, a previously unknown feature of diffusion-controlled adsorption was revealed for EVs. In addition to the decrease in particle count, this process causes the predominant losses of smaller particles.

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