Weiss, V. (2024). Gas-phase electrophoresis (nES GEMMA instrumentation) in extracellular vesicle (EV) research. In ASEV-CzeSEV: A joint meeting of the local Extracellular Vesicles communities in Austria and Czech Republic (pp. 67–67).
E164-01-1 - Forschungsgruppe Massenspektrometrische Bio- und Polymeranalytik
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Published in:
ASEV-CzeSEV: A joint meeting of the local Extracellular Vesicles communities in Austria and Czech Republic
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ISBN:
978-80-11-05123-5
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Date (published):
17-Sep-2024
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Event name:
ASEV-CzeSEV joint meeting on extracellular vesicles
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Event date:
16-Sep-2024 - 17-Sep-2024
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Event place:
VIenna, Austria
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Number of Pages:
1
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Keywords:
extracellular vesicles; nES GEMMA; Gas-phase electrophoresis
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Abstract:
Gas-phase electrophoresis (nES GEMMA
instrumentation) in extracellular vesicle (EV) research
Victor U. Weiss1)
1) TU Wien
E-mail: victor.weiss[at]tuwien.ac.at
Introduction: Gas-phase electrophoresis on a nano electrospray gas-phase electrophoretic mobility molecular analyser (nES GEMMA) separates single-charged particles obtained after a nES process with subsequent surface-drying and charge equilibration. Separation is based on the electrophoretic mobility diameter (EMD) corresponding to the particle diameter for spherical analytes. By voltage variation, particles of
different EMD successively reach the instruments’ detector unit yielding particle number concentrations in accordance with recommendations of the European Commission
for nanoparticle characterization (2011/696/EU from October 18th, 2011, updated in
2022).
Materials and Methods: EVs from human blood were isolated via ultracentrifugation. Subsequently, the original sample buffer was exchanged to volatile ammonium
acetate. This step was monitored via nanoparticle tracking analysis (NTA, Particle
Metrix, Inning am Ammersee, Germany). Gas-phase electrophoresis was on a nESGEMMA instrumentation (TSI Inc., Shoreview, MN, USA).
Results: and Discussion: In previous work, the applicability of nES GEMMA for
the analysis of liposomes, vesicles consisting of a lipid bilayer and encapsulating an
aqueous lumen, was demonstrated. nES GEMMA enabled the characterization of vesicles in terms of size distribution, particle number concentration and the occurrence of
smaller sized building blocks. Also, offline hyphenation of gas-phase electrophoresis
with orthogonal analysis methods was shown.
In vivo, cell-derived EVs, being e.g. part of cell/cell communication, are comparable to liposomes. They are envisioned as pharmaceutical cargo transporters, explaining
the need for their analytical characterization. We succeeded in porting gas-phase electrophoresis of liposomes to the characterization of EVs, e.g. demonstrating protein co-purification and loss of EV stability upon further polishing of vesicle preparations.
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Research Areas:
Materials Characterization: 40% Biological and Bioactive Materials: 60%