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Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) is an infectious disease caused by beta-coronavirus severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) that has rapidly spread across the globe starting from February 2020. It is well established that during viral infection, extracellular vesicles become delivery/presenting vectors of viral material. However, studies regarding extracellular vesicle function in COVID-19 pathology are still scanty. Here, we performed a comparative study on exosomes recovered from the plasma of either MILD or SEVERE COVID-19 patients. We show that although both types of vesicles efficiently display SARS-CoV-2 spike-derived peptides and carry immunomodulatory molecules, only those of MILD patients are capable of efficiently regulating antigen-specific CD4+ T-cell responses. Accordingly, by mass spectrometry, we show that the proteome of exosomes of MILD patients correlates with a proper functioning of the immune system, while that of SEVERE patients is associated with increased and chronic inflammation. Overall, we show that exosomes recovered from the plasma of COVID-19 patients possess SARS-CoV-2-derived protein material, have an active role in enhancing the immune response, and possess a cargo that reflects the pathological state of patients in the acute phase of the disease.

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Selection of stable THP-1 transduced clones expressing CD63Tluc-CD9EmGFP. (A,B) EmGFP fluorescence levels of the parental THP-1 cells (A) and the CD63Tluc-CD9EmGFP transduced THP-1 cells (B) were evaluated by flow cytometric assay. The CD63Tluc-CD9EmGFP transduced THP-1 cells showed ∼12% of cells expressing high levels of EmGFP. The cells with the highest EmGFP fluorescence intensity were sorted as single cell into 96-well plates. (C) GFP fluorescence levels for six THP-1 clones at passage 0. GFP intensity was normalized to the maximum signal obtained in each experiment. The R3 gate represents the percentage of GFP positive cells. (D) Luciferase activity in selected clones at passage 4. The cells were seeded at 2.5 × 105 cells/ml in a well (200 µl) of a 96-well plate and incubated overnight. Tluc activities in the culture supernatant were determined by luciferase assay and compared to the parental cells. The assays were performed in duplicate, and the data shown are means ± SD. * denotes p < 0.0001 by one-way ANOVA compared to the parental THP-1 cells with Dunnett’s post hoc testing.
Original Research
16 April 2021

Extracellular vesicles (EVs) are identified as mediators of intercellular communication and cellular regulation. In the immune system, EVs play a role in antigen presentation as a part of cellular communication. To enable drug discovery and characterization of compounds that affect EV biogenesis, function, and release in immune cells, we developed and characterized a reporter cell line that allows the quantitation of EVs shed into culture media in phenotypic high-throughput screen (HTS) format. Tetraspanins CD63 and CD9 were previously reported to be enriched in EVs; hence, a construct with dual reporters consisting of CD63-Turbo-luciferase (Tluc) and CD9-Emerald green fluorescent protein (EmGFP) was engineered. This construct was transduced into the human monocytic leukemia cell line, THP-1. Cells expressing the highest EmGFP were sorted by flow cytometry as single cell, and clonal pools were expanded under antibiotic selection pressure. After four passages, the green fluorescence dimmed, and EV biogenesis was then tracked by luciferase activity in culture supernatants. The Tluc activities of EVs shed from CD63Tluc-CD9EmGFP reporter cells in the culture supernatant positively correlated with the concentrations of released EVs measured by nanoparticle tracking analysis. To examine the potential for use in HTS, we first miniaturized the assay into a robotic 384-well plate format. A 2210 commercial compound library (Maybridge) was then screened twice on separate days, for the induction of extracellular luciferase activity. The screening data showed high reproducibility on days 1 and 2 (78.6%), a wide signal window, and an excellent Z′ factor (average of 2-day screen, 0.54). One hundred eighty-seven compounds showed a response ratio that was 3SD above the negative controls in both day 1 and 2 screens and were considered as hit candidates (approximately 10%). Twenty-two out of 40 re-tested compounds were validated. These results indicate that the performance of CD63Tluc-CD9EmGFP reporter cells is reliable, reproducible, robust, and feasible for HTS of compounds that regulate EV release by the immune cells.

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Frontiers in Pharmacology

Advancements in P2X7 Antagonists: From Mechanistic Insights to Therapeutic Applications
Edited by Natiele Carla da Silva Ferreira, ROMULO JOSE SOARES BEZERRA, Rodrigo Da Cunha Bisaggio
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25 April 2025
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