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Isolation and identification of exosomes from feline plasma, urine and adipose-derived mesenchymal stem cells

Dongsheng Li, Huina Luo, Huimin Ruan, Zhisheng Chen, Shengfeng Chen, Bingyun Wang, Yong Xie

2021BMC Veterinary Research25 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Exosomes, internal proteins, lipids, and nucleic acids coated by phospholipid bilayer membranes, are one type of small extracellular vesicles, which can mediate cell-cell communication. In recent years, exosomes have gained considerable scientific interest due to their widely applied prospect in the diagnosis and therapeutics of human and animal diseases. In this study, we describe for the first time a feasible method designed to isolate and characterize exosomes from feline plasma, urine and adipose-derived mesenchymal stem cells. RESULTS: Exosomes from feline plasma, urine and adipose-derived mesenchymal stem cells were successfully isolated by differential centrifugation. Quantification and sizing of exosomes were assessed by transmission electron microscopy, flow nano analysis and western blotting. Detected particles showed the normal size (30-100 nm) and morphology described for exosomes, as well as presence of the transmembrane protein (TSG101, CD9, CD63, and CD81) known as exosomal marker. CONCLUSIONS: The results suggest that differential centrifugation is a feasible method for isolation of exosomes from different types of feline samples. Moreover, these exosomes can be used to further diagnosis and therapeutics in veterinary pre-clinical and clinical studies.

Topics & Concepts

MicrovesiclesMesenchymal stem cellExosomeCell biologyCD81CD63Nanoparticle tracking analysisDifferential centrifugationAdipose tissueBiologyChemistryMolecular biologymicroRNAImmunologyBiochemistryGeneVirusHepatitis C virusExtracellular vesicles in diseaseMesenchymal stem cell researchTissue Engineering and Regenerative Medicine