Circulating
tumor-derived extracellular vesicles (EVs) have emerged
as a promising source for identifying cancer biomarkers for early
cancer detection. However, the clinical utility of EVs has thus far
been limited by the fact that most EV isolation methods are tedious,
nonstandardized, and require bulky instrumentation such as ultracentrifugation
(UC). Here, we report a size-based EV isolation tool called ExoTIC
(exosome total isolation chip), which is simple, easy-to-use, modular,
and facilitates high-yield and high-purity EV isolation from biofluids.
ExoTIC achieves an EV yield ∼4–1000-fold higher than
that with UC, and EV-derived protein and microRNA levels are well-correlated
between the two methods. Moreover, we demonstrate that ExoTIC is a
modular platform that can sort a heterogeneous population of cancer
cell line EVs based on size. Further, we utilize ExoTIC to isolate
EVs from cancer patient clinical samples, including plasma, urine,
and lavage, demonstrating the device’s broad applicability
to cancers and other diseases. Finally, the ability of ExoTIC to efficiently
isolate EVs from small sample volumes opens up avenues for preclinical
studies in small animal tumor models and for point-of-care
EV-based clinical testing from fingerprick quantities (10–100
μL) of blood.
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Liu, Fei; Vermesh, Ophir; Mani, Vigneshwaran; Ge, Tianjia J.; Madsen, Steven J.; Sabour, Andrew; et al. (2017). The
Exosome Total Isolation Chip. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acsnano.7b04878