A solution to the biophysical fractionation of extracellular vesicles: Acoustic Nanoscale Separation via Wave-pillar Excitation Resonance (ANSWER)

Jinxin Zhang(Duke University), Chuyi Chen(Duke University), Ryan Becker(Duke University), Joseph Rufo(Duke University), Shujie Yang(Duke University), D. John(University of Southern California), Peiran Zhang(Duke University), Yuyang Gu(Duke University), Zeyu Wang(Duke University), Zhehan Ma(Duke University), Jianping Xia(Duke University), Nanjing Hao(Duke University), Zhenhua Tian(Virginia Tech), David T. Wong(University of California, Los Angeles), Yoel Sadovsky(University of Pittsburgh), Luke P. Lee(Brigham and Women's Hospital), Tony Jun Huang(Duke University)
Science Advances
November 23, 2022
Cited by 62Open Access
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Abstract

High-precision isolation of small extracellular vesicles (sEVs) from biofluids is essential toward developing next-generation liquid biopsies and regenerative therapies. However, current methods of sEV separation require specialized equipment and time-consuming protocols and have difficulties producing highly pure subpopulations of sEVs. Here, we present Acoustic Nanoscale Separation via Wave-pillar Excitation Resonance (ANSWER), which allows single-step, rapid (<10 min), high-purity (>96% small exosomes, >80% exomeres) fractionation of sEV subpopulations from biofluids without the need for any sample preprocessing. Particles are iteratively deflected in a size-selective manner via an excitation resonance. This previously unidentified phenomenon generates patterns of virtual, tunable, pillar-like acoustic field in a fluid using surface acoustic waves. Highly precise sEV fractionation without the need for sample preprocessing or complex nanofabrication methods has been demonstrated using ANSWER, showing potential as a powerful tool that will enable more in-depth studies into the complexity, heterogeneity, and functionality of sEV subpopulations.


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