Acute effects of focused ultrasound-induced increases in blood-brain barrier permeability on rat microvascular transcriptome.
Authors: McMahon D, Bendayan R, Hynynen K
Therapeutic treatment options for central nervous system diseases are greatly limited by the blood-brain barrier (BBB). Focused ultrasound (FUS), in conjunction with circulating microbubbles, can be used to induce a targeted and transient increase in BBB permeability, providing a unique approach for the delivery of drugs from the systemic circulation into the brain. While preclinical research has demonstrated the utility of FUS, there remains a large gap in our knowledge regarding the impact of sonication on BBB gene expression. This work is focused on investigating the transcriptional changes in dorsal hippocampal rat microvessels in the acute stages following sonication. Microarray analysis of microvessels was performed at 6 and 24 hrs post-FUS. Expression changes in individual genes and bioinformatic analysis suggests that FUS may induce a transient inflammatory response in microvessels. Increased transcription of proinflammatory cytokine genes appears to be short-lived, largely returning to baseline by 24 hrs. This observation may help to explain some previously observed bioeffects of FUS and may also be a driving force for the angiogenic processes and reduced drug efflux suggested by this work. While further studies are necessary, these results open up intriguing possibilities for novel FUS applications and suggest possible routes for pharmacologically modifying the technique.
Introduction
Purpose
Drug delivery with BBB opening
Study Objective
To investigate acute transcriptional changes in dorsal hippocampal rat microvessels following focused ultrasound-induced blood–brain barrier disruption.
Animal model / Human subject
Rattus norvegicus (rat); strain: Sprague-Dawley; age: not specified; sex: not specified
Disease model
Healthy
MRI or image guidance method
MRI-guided
Targeted brain region(s)
Dorsal Hippocampus
Outcomes and Safety
Summary of Outcomes
FUS-induced BBB opening in the dorsal hippocampus triggered an acute transcriptional response in microvessels, marked by transient upregulation of inflammatory cytokine and chemokine genes and transient downregulation of BBB transporter genes at 6 hours, with partial resolution and induction of angiogenesis-related gene expressure by 24 hours
Duration of biological effect
Less than 24 hours
Safety-related matter
FUS induced a transient acute inflammatory transcriptional response in hippocampal microvessels at 6 hrs that largely returned toward baseline by 24 hrs, though some markers remained elevated and astrocyte activation was seen; associated changes could affect leukocyte infiltration and drug efflux. The authors report no evidence of long-term adverse effects in prior survival and behavioural studies but the effects of repeated sonication and long-term outcomes require further investigation
Brain Region
Ultrasound Parameters
Ultrasound instrument
RK100 system (FUS Instruments Inc., Toronto, ON, Canada)
FUS Frequency
551.5 kHz
FUS Pressure
0.19 Mpa
FUS Mode
pulsed
Pulse duration
10 ms
Duration of a single FUS session
120 s
Focal Characteristics
Focal depth: None; Focal length: None; Aperture size: None
Treatment frequency
single session
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