Abstract
Platelets and their extracellular vesicles (EVs) have emerged as promising liquid biopsy biosources for cancer detection and monitoring. The megakaryoblastic MEG-01 cell line offers a controlled system for generating platelet-like particles (PLPs) and EVs through valproic-acid-induced differentiation. Here, we performed comprehensive characterization and proteomic validation of MEG-01-derived populations, native human platelets, and their EVs using nanoparticle tracking analysis, transmission electron microscopy, imaging flow cytometry and quantitative proteomics. MEG-01 megakaryocytic differentiation is characterized by polylobulated nuclei, proplatelet formation, and elevated CD41/CD42a expression. PLPs predominantly exhibit an activated-like phenotype (CD62P+, degranulated morphology), while microvesicles (100-500 nm) and exosomes (50-250 nm) displayed size distributions and phenotypic markers consistent with native platelet-derived EVs. Proteomics identified substantial core proteomes shared across fractions and fraction-specific patterns consistent with selective cargo partitioning during EV biogenesis. Functional enrichment indicated that MEG-01-derived vesicles preserve key hemostatic, cytoskeletal, and immune pathways commonly associated with platelet EV biology. Ingenuity Pathway Analysis showed that PLPs exhibit proliferative transcriptional programs (elevated MYC/RB1/TEAD1, reduced GATA1), while plasma exosomes display minimal differential pathway activation compared to MEG-01 exosomes. Overall, these findings suggest that MEG-01-derived EVs approximate certain aspects of megakaryocyte-lineage exosomes and activated platelet-like states, although they do not fully replicate native platelet biology. Notably, plasma exosomes show strong proteomic convergence with MEG-01 exosomes, whereas platelet exosomes retain distinct activation-related features.