Impact of Isolation and Storage Methods on the Properties of Neural Extracellular Vesicles
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Extracellular vesicles (EVs) are nanoscale, cell-secreted mediators of intercellular communication with growing promise as therapeutic agents. Manufacturing practices, including EV isolation and storage approaches, are critical determinants of product consistency, purity, and potency. In this study, neural stem cell (NSC)-derived EVs were isolated from conditioned NSC culture media via oscillator-based isolation (OSC), ultracentrifugation (1 or 2 hours), and ultrafiltration, and were stored lyophilized or cryopreserved. Nanoparticle yield, size distribution, and subpopulation composition were evaluated by nano-flow cytometry, quantifying total nanoparticles, membrane-bound EVs and CD63+ EVs. Purification was calculated via particle-to-protein ratios, morphology was evaluated by transmission electron microscopy, and potency was assessed using a microglia morphology assay. Particle yield was comparable across isolation methods, though protein clearance varied, with OSC demonstrating purification relative to conditioned media. Lyophilized samples retained structural integrity, size, and population profiles comparable to cryopreserved samples. Lyophilized and cryopreserved EVs exhibited dose-dependent immunomodulatory activity in our microglia morphology assay, with significant effects observed at 200,000 EVs per cell. These findings highlight the importance of isolation method in EV product quality and support lyophilization as a viable storage strategy which overcomes the logistical limitations of cryopreservation, thereby advancing the development of a robust pipeline for therapeutic EV manufacture.