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Editorials

Minimal experimental requirements for definition of extracellular vesicles and their functions: a position statement from the International Society for Extracellular Vesicles

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Article: 26913 | Published online: 22 Dec 2014

Figures & data

Fig. 1.  Comparative evolution of the use of different terms for EVs in the literature. An advanced search was performed in PubMed at the end of December 2013 to find, for each year of publication, all articles using the given term (singular or plural) as text word: exosome(s), microvesicles, oncosome(s), ectosome(s), prostasome(s), matrix/calcifying vesicle(s). Year of final publication (and not advanced online date) of articles in English (and not other languages) was taken into account. Manual elimination of articles describing non-EV-related work was performed for exosome(s) (RNA-excision machinery) and microvesicle(s) (intracellular secretory vesicles). Use of the term microparticle(s) could not be reliably evaluated, since it is massively used to refer to non-vesicle-related particles. Notably, from 2004 onwards, the term “exosome” has become the most often used in published articles describing EVs, whereas the term “extracellular vesicles,” chosen as generic term at creation of ISEV in September 2011, is steadily growing. This figure is not intended to show expansion of the EV field as compared to other fields, since numbers are not normalized to the total number of scientific medico-biological publications per year.

Fig. 1.  Comparative evolution of the use of different terms for EVs in the literature. An advanced search was performed in PubMed at the end of December 2013 to find, for each year of publication, all articles using the given term (singular or plural) as text word: exosome(s), microvesicles, oncosome(s), ectosome(s), prostasome(s), matrix/calcifying vesicle(s). Year of final publication (and not advanced online date) of articles in English (and not other languages) was taken into account. Manual elimination of articles describing non-EV-related work was performed for exosome(s) (RNA-excision machinery) and microvesicle(s) (intracellular secretory vesicles). Use of the term microparticle(s) could not be reliably evaluated, since it is massively used to refer to non-vesicle-related particles. Notably, from 2004 onwards, the term “exosome” has become the most often used in published articles describing EVs, whereas the term “extracellular vesicles,” chosen as generic term at creation of ISEV in September 2011, is steadily growing. This figure is not intended to show expansion of the EV field as compared to other fields, since numbers are not normalized to the total number of scientific medico-biological publications per year.

Table I. Different categories of proteins and their expected presence in EV isolates, including some examples (non-exclusive)