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Infrared Nanospectroscopy of Individual Extracellular Microvesicles
Authors:Raffaella Polito  Mattia Musto  Maria Eleonora Temperini  Laura Ballerini  Michele Ortolani  Leonetta Baldassarre  Loredana Casalis  Valeria Giliberti
Institution:1.Department of Physics, Sapienza University of Rome, Piazzale Aldo Moro 2, I-00185 Roma, Italy; (R.P.); (M.E.T.); (M.O.); (L.B.);2.International School for Advanced Studies (SISSA), I-34136 Trieste, Italy; (M.M.) (L.B.);3.Elettra-Sincrotrone Trieste S.C.p.A., Area Science Park, I-34149 Trieste, Italy;4.Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia, Center for Life NanoScience, Viale Regina Elena 291, I-00161 Roma, Italy
Abstract:Extracellular vesicles are membrane-delimited structures, involved in several inter-cellular communication processes, both physiological and pathological, since they deliver complex biological cargo. Extracellular vesicles have been identified as possible biomarkers of several pathological diseases; thus, their characterization is fundamental in order to gain a deep understanding of their function and of the related processes. Traditional approaches for the characterization of the molecular content of the vesicles require a large quantity of sample, thereby providing an average molecular profile, while their heterogeneity is typically probed by non-optical microscopies that, however, lack the chemical sensitivity to provide information of the molecular cargo. Here, we perform a study of individual microvesicles, a subclass of extracellular vesicles generated by the outward budding of the plasma membrane, released by two cultures of glial cells under different stimuli, by applying a state-of-the-art infrared nanospectroscopy technique based on the coupling of an atomic force microscope and a pulsed laser, which combines the label-free chemical sensitivity of infrared spectroscopy with the nanometric resolution of atomic force microscopy. By correlating topographic, mechanical and spectroscopic information of individual microvesicles, we identified two main populations in both families of vesicles released by the two cell cultures. Subtle differences in terms of nucleic acid content among the two families of vesicles have been found by performing a fitting procedure of the main nucleic acid vibrational peaks in the 1000–1250 cm−1 frequency range.
Keywords:extracellular vesicles  infrared nanoscale spectroscopy  atomic force microscopy
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