General and mild modification of food-derived extracellular vesicles for enhanced cell targeting

Extracellular Vesicles
/References

Food-derived extracellular vesicles (FDEVs) have attracted increasing attention as potential delivery vehicles for therapeutic agents due to their desirable features such as excellent biocompatibility, easy accessibility and cost effectiveness. However, the intrinsic targeting capability of FDEVs is unsatisfactory compared to artificial nanoparticles or other source-derived EVs, which calls for efficient surface engineering strategies to equip them with specific ligands. Here we report a general and mild modification method via reduction of disulfide groups to maleimide reactive thiols. Taking milk-derived EVs (mEVs) as a model system, we demonstrated the feasibility for tethering various ligands on the surface without compromising the vesicular structures. Building an ultra-sensitive nano-flow cytometer (nFCM), the heterogeneous nature of the functionalized samples was revealed, and a magnetic separation approach was proposed accordingly to remove the as-observed non-EV particles. The cellular uptake and cytotoxicity experiments provided direct evidence showing an enhanced cell targeting and cargo delivery capability of the ligand conjugated mEVs. In addition, the in vivo imaging further proved the applicability of transferrin conjugation for increased tumor enrichment of mEVs. Collectively, this general and mild ligand conjugation method enables an efficient surface functionalization of FDEVs, which is of vital importance for enhanced targeting delivery.

View full article

Recent Publications

Cigarette smoke (CS) represents one of the most relevant environmental risk factors for several chronic pathologies. Tissue damage caused by CS exposure is mediated, at least in part, by oxidative stress induced by its toxic and pro-oxidant components. Evidence demonstrates that extracellular vesicles (EVs) released by various cell types exposed to CS extract (CSE) are characterized by altered biochemical cargo and gained pathological properties. In the present study, we evaluated the content of oxidized proteins and phospholipid fatty acid profiles of EVs released by human bronchial epithelial BEAS-2B cells treated with CSE. This specific molecular characterization has hitherto not been performed. After confirmation that CSE reduces viability of BEAS-2B cells and elevates intracellular ROS levels, in a dose-dependent manner, we demonstrated that 24 h exposure at 1% CSE, a concentration that only slight modifies cell viability but increases ROS levels, was able to increase carbonylated protein levels in cells and released EVs. The release of oxidatively modified proteins via EVs might represent a mechanism used by cells to remove toxic proteins in order to avoid their intracellular overloading. Moreover, 1% CSE induced only few changes in the fatty acid asset in BEAS-2B cell membrane phospholipids, whereas several rearrangements were observed in EVs released by CSE-treated cells. The impact of changes in acyl chain composition of CSE-EVs accounted for the increased saturation levels of phospholipids, a membrane parameter that might influence EV stability, uptake and, at least in part, EV-mediated biological effects. The present in vitro study adds new information concerning the biochemical composition of CSE-related EVs, useful to predict their biological effects on target cells. Furthermore, the information regarding the presence of oxidized proteins and the specific membrane features of CSE-related EVs can be useful to define the utilization of circulating EVs as marker for diagnosing of CS-induced lung damage and/or CS-related diseases.

2023
No items found.
No items found.
No items found.