High-Performance
Chemical Isotope Labeling Liquid
Chromatography Mass Spectrometry for Exosome Metabolomics
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Abstract
Circulating
exosomes in bodily fluids such as blood are being actively
studied as a rich source of chemical biomarkers for cancer diagnosis
and monitoring. Although nucleic acid analysis is a primary tool for
the discovery of circulating biomarkers in exosomes, metabolomics
holds the potential of expanding the chemical diversity of biomarkers
that may be easy and rapid to detect. However, only trace amounts
of exosomes can be isolated from a small volume of patient blood,
and thus a very sensitive technique is required to analyze the metabolome
of exosomes. In this report, we present a workflow that involves multiple
cycles of ultracentrifugation for exosome isolation using a starting
material of 2 mL of human serum, freeze–thaw-cycles in 50%
methanol/water for exosome lysis and metabolite extraction, differential
chemical isotope labeling (CIL) of metabolites for enhancing liquid
chromatography (LC) separation and improving mass spectrometry (MS)
detection, and nanoflow LC-MS (nLC-MS) with captivespray for analysis.
As a proof-of-principle, we used dansylation labeling to analyze the
amine- and phenol-submetabolomes in two sets of exosome samples isolated
from the blood samples of five pancreatic cancer patients before and
after chemotherapy treatment. The average number of peak pairs or
metabolites detected was 1964 ± 60 per sample for a total of
2446 peak pairs (<i>n</i> = 10) in the first set and 1948
± 117 per sample for a total of 2511 peak pairs (<i>n</i> = 10) in the second set. There were 101 and 94 metabolites positively
identified in the first and second set, respectively, and 1580 and
1590 peak pairs with accurate masses matching those of metabolites
in the MyCompoundID metabolome database. Analyzing the mixtures of <sup>12</sup>C-labeled individual exosome samples spiked with a <sup>13</sup>C-labeled pooled sample which served as an internal standard allowed
relative quantification of metabolomic changes of exosomes of blood
samples collected before and after treatment