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Guidelines for the purification and characterization of extracellular vesicles of parasites

Journal of Extracellular Biology 2023 34 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 60 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Carmen Fernández-Becerra, Patrícia Xander, Daniel Alfandari, George Dong, George Dong, Iris Aparici‐Herraiz, Irit Rosenhek‐Goldian, Mehrdad Shokouhy, Melisa Gualdrón‐López, Nicholy Lozano, Núria Cortes-Serra, Paula Abou Karam, Paula Abou Karam, Paula Meneghetti, Rafael Pedro Madeira, Ziv Porat, Rodrigo Pedro Soares, Adriana Oliveira Costa, Sima Rafati, Anabela Cordeiro‐da‐Silva, Nuno Santarém, Christopher Fernandez‐Prada, Marcel I. Ramirez, Dolores Bernal, Antonio Marcilla, Vera Lúcia Pereira‐Chioccola, Lysangela R. Alves, Hernando A. del Portillo, Neta Regev‐Rudzki, Igor C. Almeida, Sérgio Schenkman, Martin Olivier, Ana Cláudia Torrecilhas

Summary

This paper provides guidelines for scientists studying extracellular vesicles released by parasites, which play roles in infection and immune evasion. While not about microplastics, the standardized methods described here for isolating and analyzing tiny biological particles are relevant to microplastics research, where similar techniques are needed to study how nanoplastics interact with cells. Better laboratory standards across these fields help improve the quality of research on tiny particle exposure and health effects.

Body Systems
Models

Parasites are responsible for the most neglected tropical diseases, affecting over a billion people worldwide (WHO, 2015) and accounting for billions of cases a year and responsible for several millions of deaths. Research on extracellular vesicles (EVs) has increased in recent years and demonstrated that EVs shed by pathogenic parasites interact with host cells playing an important role in the parasite's survival, such as facilitation of infection, immunomodulation, parasite adaptation to the host environment and the transfer of drug resistance factors. Thus, EVs released by parasites mediate parasite-parasite and parasite-host intercellular communication. In addition, they are being explored as biomarkers of asymptomatic infections and disease prognosis after drug treatment. However, most current protocols used for the isolation, size determination, quantification and characterization of molecular cargo of EVs lack greater rigor, standardization, and adequate quality controls to certify the enrichment or purity of the ensuing bioproducts. We are now initiating major guidelines based on the evolution of collective knowledge in recent years. The main points covered in this position paper are methods for the isolation and molecular characterization of EVs obtained from parasite-infected cell cultures, experimental animals, and patients. The guideline also includes a discussion of suggested protocols and functional assays in host cells.

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