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Saponin is Essential for the Isolation of Proteins and RNA from Biological Nanoparticles

Authors :
Brezgin, Sergey
Frolova, Anastasia
Bayurova, Ekaterina
Slatinskaya, Olga
Ponomareva, Natalia
Parshina, Evgeniia
Bochkova, Zhanna
Kachanov, Artyom
Tikhonov, Andrey
Kostyusheva, Anastasiya
Karandashov, Ivan
Demina, Polina
Latyshev, Oleg
Eliseeva, Olesja
Belikova, Maria
Pokrovsky, Vadim S.
Gegechkory, Vladimir
Khaydukov, Evgeny
Silachev, Denis
Zamyatnin Jr, Andrey A.
Maksimov, Georgy
Lukashev, Alexander
Gordeychuk, Ilya
Chulanov, Vladimir
Kostyushev, Dmitry
Source :
Analytical Chemistry; October 2024, Vol. 96 Issue: 43 p17432-17443, 12p
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Extracellular vesicles (EVs), biomimetics, and other biological nanoparticles (BNs) produced from human cells are gaining increasing attention in the fields of molecular diagnostics and nanomedicine for the delivery of therapeutic cargo. In particular, BNs are considered prospective delivery vehicles for different biologics, including protein and RNA therapeutics. Moreover, EVs are widely used in molecular diagnostics for early detection of disease-associated proteins and RNA. Technical approaches for measuring biologics mostly originated from the field of EVs and were later adopted for other BNs, such as extracellular vesicle-mimetic nanovesicles, membrane nanoparticles (nanoghosts), and hybrid nanoparticles, with minimal modifications. Here, we demonstrate that BNs are highly resistant to protocols that severely underestimate the protein and RNA content of BNs, and provide the relevance of these data both for general BNs characterization and practical applications of CRISPR/Cas-based therapies. We demonstrate that the addition of saponin leads to an ∼2- to 7-fold enhancement in protein isolation and an ∼2- to 242-fold improvement in RNA recovery rates and detection efficiency. Differences in the proteolipid contents of BNs, measured by Raman and surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy, correlate with their susceptibility to saponin treatment for cargo extraction. Finally, we develop a unified protocol using saponin to efficiently isolate proteins and RNA from the BNs. These data demonstrate that previously utilized protocols underestimate BN cargo contents and offer gold standard protocols that can be broadly adopted into the field of nanobiologics, molecular diagnostics, and analytical chemistry.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00032700 and 15206882
Volume :
96
Issue :
43
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Analytical Chemistry
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs67691487
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.analchem.4c04607