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Isolation of sensory hair cell specific exosomes in human perilymph.

Authors :
Zhuang, Pei
Phung, Suiching
Warnecke, Athanasia
Arambula, Alexandra
St. Peter, Madeleine
He, Mei
Staecker, Hinrich
Source :
Neuroscience Letters. Nov2021, Vol. 764, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

• First demonstration of exosome isolation from human inner ear perilymph. • Use of immunomagnetic isolation that can capture exosomes in a 2–5 µL sample. • Identification of exosomes specific to human inner ear hair cells. Evaluation of hearing loss patients using clinical audiometry has been unable to give a definitive cellular or molecular diagnosis, hampering the development of treatments of sensorineural hearing loss. However, biopsy of inner ear tissue without losing residual hearing function for pathologic diagnosis is extremely challenging. In a clinical setting, perilymph can be accessed, potentially allowing the development of fluid based diagnostic tests. Recent approaches to improving inner ear diagnostics have been focusing on the evaluation of the proteomic or miRNA profiles of perilymph. Inspired by recent characterization and classification of many neurodegenerative diseases using exosomes which not only are produced in locally in diseased tissue but are transported beyond the blood brain barrier, we demonstrate the isolation of human inner ear specific exosomes using a novel ultrasensitive immunomagnetic nano pom-poms capture-release approach. Using perilymph samples harvested from surgical procedures, we were able to isolate exosomes from sensorineural hearing loss patients in only 2–5 μL of perilymph. By isolating sensory hair cell derived exosomes through their expression level of myosin VIIa, we for the first-time sample material from hair cells in the living human inner ear. This work sets up the first demonstration of immunomagnetic capture-release nano pom-pom isolated exosomes for liquid biopsy diagnosis of sensorineural hearing loss. With the ability to isolate exosomes derived from different cell types for molecular characterization, this method also can be developed for analyzing exosomal biomarkers from more accessible patient tissue fluids such as plasma. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03043940
Volume :
764
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Neuroscience Letters
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
153372092
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neulet.2021.136282