Abstract

Immunophenotyping of vesicles, such as extracellular vesicles (EVs), is essential to understanding their origin and biological role. We previously described a custom-built flow analyzer that utilizes a gravity-driven flow, high numerical aperture objective, and micrometer-sized flow channels to reach the sensitivity needed for fast multidimensional analysis of the surface proteins of EVs, even down to the smallest EVs (e.g., ∼30-40 nm). It is difficult to flow focus small EVs, and thus, the transiting EVs exhibit a distribution in particle velocities due to the laminar flow. This distribution of vesicle velocities leads to potentially incorrect results when immunophenotyping nanometer-sized vesicles using cross-correlation analysis (Xcorr), as the order of appearance of the vesicles might not be the same at different spatially offset laser excitation regions. Here, we describe an alternative cross-correlation analysis strategy (Scorr), which uses information on particle transit time across the laser excitation beam width to improve multicolor colocalization in single-vesicle immunoprofiling. We tested the performance of the algorithm for colocalization analysis of multicolor nanobeads and EVs experimentally and via simulations and found that Scorr improved both the efficiency and accuracy of colocalization versus Xcorr. As shown from Monte Carlo simulations, Scorr provided an ∼1.2-4.7-fold increase in the number of colocalized peaks and ensured negligible colocalization of peaks. In silico results were in good agreement with experimental data, which showed an increase in colocalized peaks of ∼1.3-2.5-fold and ∼1.2-2-fold for multicolor beads and EVs, respectively.

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