Nanopore membrane chip-based isolation method for metabolomic analysis of plasma small extracellular vesicles from COVID-19 survivors

Biosens Bioelectron. 2023 May 1:227:115152. doi: 10.1016/j.bios.2023.115152. Epub 2023 Feb 15.

Abstract

Multiple studies showed that metabolic disorders play a critical role in respiratory infectious diseases, including COVID-19. Metabolites contained in small extracellular vesicles (sEVs) are different from those in plasma at the acute stage, while the metabolic features of plasma sEVs of COVID-19 survivors remain unknown. Here, we used a nanopore membrane-based microfluidic chip for plasma sEVs separation, termed ExoSEC, and compared the sEVs obtained by UC, REG, and ExoSEC in terms the time, cost, purity, and metabolic features. The results indicated the ExoSEC was much less costly, provided higher purity by particles/proteins ratio, and achieved 205-fold and 2-fold higher sEVs yield, than UC and REG, respectively. Moreover, more metabolites were identified and several signaling pathways were significantly enriched in ExoSEC-sEVs compared to UC-sEVs and REG-sEVs. Furthermore, we detected 306 metabolites in plasma sEVs using ExoSEC from recovered asymptomatic (RA), moderate (RM), and severe/critical COVID-19 (RS) patients without underlying diseases 3 months after discharge. Our study demonstrated that COVID-19 survivors, especially RS, experienced significant metabolic alteration and the dysregulated pathways mainly involved fatty acid biosynthesis, phenylalanine metabolism, etc. Metabolites of the fatty acid biosynthesis pathway bore a significantly negative association with red blood cell counts and hemoglobin, which might be ascribed to hypoxia or respiratory failure in RM and RS but not in RA at the acute stage. Our study confirmed that ExoSEC could provide a practical and economical alternative for high throughput sEVs metabolomic study.

Keywords: COVID-19; Metabolomics; Small extracellular vesicles; sEVs separation and enrichment chip (ExoSEC).

MeSH terms

  • Biosensing Techniques*
  • COVID-19*
  • Extracellular Vesicles*
  • Fatty Acids
  • Humans
  • Nanopores*

Substances

  • Fatty Acids