TY - JOUR
T1 - Nanoprojectile Secondary Ion Mass Spectrometry for Analysis of Extracellular Vesicles
AU - Verkhoturov, Dmitriy S.
AU - Crulhas, Bruno P.
AU - Eller, Michael J.
AU - Han, Yong D.
AU - Verkhoturov, Stanislav V.
AU - Bisrat, Yordanos
AU - Revzin, Alexander
AU - Schweikert, Emile A.
N1 - Funding Information:
This work was supported by the National Institute of Health under award R01-GM123757. The authors would like to thank Dr. Barondeau and the Barondeau research team at Texas A&M University for their assistance.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 American Chemical Society. All rights reserved.
PY - 2021/5/25
Y1 - 2021/5/25
N2 - We describe a technique based on secondary ion mass spectrometry with nanoprojectiles (NP-SIMS) for determining the protein content of extracellular vesicles, EVs, via tagged antibodies. The technique uses individual gold nanoprojectiles (e.g., Au4004+ and Au28008+), separated in time and space, to bombard a surface. For each projectile impact (10-20 nm in diameter), the co-emitted molecules are mass analyzed and recorded as an individual mass spectrum. Examining these individual mass spectra for co-localized species allows for nanoscale mass spectrometry to be performed. The high lateral resolution of this technique is well suited for analyzing nano-objects. SIMS is generally limited to analyzing small molecules (below ∼1500 Da); therefore, we evaluated three molecules (eosin, erythrosine, and BHHTEGST) as prospective mass spectrometry tags. We tested these on a model surface comprising a mixture of all three tags conjugated to antibodies and found that NP-SIMS could detect all three tags from a single projectile impact. Applying the method, we tagged two surface proteins common in urinary EVs, CD63 and CD81, with anti-CD63-erythrosine and anti-CD81-BHHTEGST. We found that NP-SIMS could determine the relative abundance of the two proteins and required only a few hundred or thousand EVs in the analysis region to detect the presence of the tagged antibodies.
AB - We describe a technique based on secondary ion mass spectrometry with nanoprojectiles (NP-SIMS) for determining the protein content of extracellular vesicles, EVs, via tagged antibodies. The technique uses individual gold nanoprojectiles (e.g., Au4004+ and Au28008+), separated in time and space, to bombard a surface. For each projectile impact (10-20 nm in diameter), the co-emitted molecules are mass analyzed and recorded as an individual mass spectrum. Examining these individual mass spectra for co-localized species allows for nanoscale mass spectrometry to be performed. The high lateral resolution of this technique is well suited for analyzing nano-objects. SIMS is generally limited to analyzing small molecules (below ∼1500 Da); therefore, we evaluated three molecules (eosin, erythrosine, and BHHTEGST) as prospective mass spectrometry tags. We tested these on a model surface comprising a mixture of all three tags conjugated to antibodies and found that NP-SIMS could detect all three tags from a single projectile impact. Applying the method, we tagged two surface proteins common in urinary EVs, CD63 and CD81, with anti-CD63-erythrosine and anti-CD81-BHHTEGST. We found that NP-SIMS could determine the relative abundance of the two proteins and required only a few hundred or thousand EVs in the analysis region to detect the presence of the tagged antibodies.
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U2 - 10.1021/acs.analchem.1c00689
DO - 10.1021/acs.analchem.1c00689
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85106396185
SN - 0003-2700
VL - 93
SP - 7481
EP - 7490
JO - Analytical Chemistry
JF - Analytical Chemistry
IS - 20
ER -