Issue 45, 2024

Assessing the conjugation efficiency of surface-modified extracellular vesicles using single nanovesicle analysis technologies

Abstract

Extracellular vesicles (EVs) are cell-secreted nanoscale vesicles with important roles in cell–cell communication and drug delivery. Although EVs pose a promising alternative to cell-based therapy, targeted delivery in vivo is lacking. Their surface is often modified to endow them with active targeting molecules to enable specific cell uptake and tailor EV biodistribution. A dominant paradigm has been to evaluate the EV surface functionalization using bulk analysis assays, such as western blotting and bead-based flow cytometry. Yet, the heterogeneity of EVs is now recognized as a major bottleneck for their clinical translation. Here, we engineer the EV surface at the single-vesicle level. We applied orthogonal platforms with single vesicle resolution to determine and optimize the efficiency of conjugating the myelin-targeting aptamer LJM-3064 to single EVs (Apt-EVs). The aptamers were conjugated using either lipid insertion or covalent protein modification, followed by an assessment of single-EV integrity and stability. We observed unique aptamer conjugation to single EVs that depends on EV size. Our study underscores the importance of single vesicle analysis for engineering EVs and provides a novel single-EV-based framework for modifying EV surfaces.

Graphical abstract: Assessing the conjugation efficiency of surface-modified extracellular vesicles using single nanovesicle analysis technologies

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
12 Apr 2024
Accepted
06 Sep 2024
First published
23 Sep 2024

Nanoscale, 2024,16, 20903-20916

Assessing the conjugation efficiency of surface-modified extracellular vesicles using single nanovesicle analysis technologies

L. Goldbloom-Helzner, H. Bains, E. G. Loll, T. Henson, R. R. Mizenko, P. Kumar, C. Tan, D. L. Farmer, R. P. Carney and A. Wang, Nanoscale, 2024, 16, 20903 DOI: 10.1039/D4NR01603C

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