Sufficient virus-neutralizing antibody in the central nerve system improves the survival of rabid rats.
Authors: Liao PH, Yang HH, Chou PT, Wang MH, Chu PC, Liu HL, Chen LK
Rabies is known to be lethal in human. Treatment with passive immunity for the rabies is effective only when the patients have not shown the central nerve system (CNS) signs. The blood-brain barrier (BBB) is a complex functional barrier that may compromise the therapeutic development in neurological diseases. The goal of this study is to determine the change of BBB integrity and to assess the therapeutic possibility of enhancing BBB permeability combined with passive immunity in the late stage of rabies virus infection. The integrity of BBB permeability in rats was measured by quantitative ELISA for total IgG and albumin levels in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and by exogenously applying Evans blue as a tracer. Western blotting of occludin and ZO-1, two tight junction proteins, was used to assess the molecular change of BBB structure.The breakdown of BBB with hypertonic arabinose, recombinant tumor necrosis factor-alpha (rTNF-γ), and focused ultrasound (FUS) were used to compare the extent of BBB disruption with rabies virus infection. Specific humoral immunity was analyzed by immunofluorescent assay and rapid fluorescent focus inhibition test. Virus-neutralizing monoclonal antibody (mAb) 8-10E was administered to rats with hypertonic breakdown of BBB as a passive immunotherapy to prevent the death from rabies. The BBB permeability was altered on day 7 post-infection. Increased BBB permeability induced by rabies virus infection was observed primarily in the cerebellum and spinal cord. Occludin was significantly decreased in both the cerebral cortex and cerebellum. The rabies virus-specific antibody was not strongly elicited even in the presence of clinical signs. Disruption of BBB had no direct association with the lethal outcome of rabies. Passive immunotherapy with virus-neutralizing mAb 8-10E with the hypertonic breakdown of BBB prolonged the survival of rabies virus-infected rats. We demonstrated that the BBB permeability was altered in a rat model with rabies virus inoculation. Delivery of neutralizing mAb to the infected site in brain combined with effective breakdown of BBB could be an aggressive but feasible therapeutic mode in rabies when the CNS infection has been established.
Introduction
Purpose
Drug delivery with BBB opening
Study Objective
To determine changes in blood–brain barrier integrity during rabies infection and evaluate whether enhancing BBB permeability combined with passive immunotherapy can treat late-stage rabies in a rat model.
Animal model / Human subject
Rat (Rattus norvegicus), LEW/SsNNarl (LEW), 8-10 weeks old, male
Disease model
Rabies (rabies virus infection in a rat model)
Targeted brain region(s)
Brain Hemisphere (Entire Half Brain)
Cargo name and characteristics
Virus-neutralizing monoclonal antibody mAb 8-10E
Route of administration
intraperitoneal
Outcomes and Safety
Summary of Outcomes
Rabies virus infection in rats caused BBB opening beginning around day 7 post-infection (predominantly in cerebellum and spinal cord) with reduced occludin and poor endogenous neutralizing antibody responses; passive transfer of mAb 8-10E, particularly when combined with hypertonic BBB disruption on day 7, prolonged survival. Effective BBB-opening methods were intracarotid hypertonic arabinose and focused ultrasound (with microbubbles); recombinant TNF-α did not induce BBB leakage for large molecules.
Duration of biological effect
6 h
Safety-related matter
The authors report potential adverse effects of osmotic (hypertonic arabinose) BBB disruption—specifically seizures—that could reinforce neuronal damage and may reduce treatment efficacy; no other treatment-related adverse effects were described.
Brain Region
Ultrasound Parameters
FUS Pressure
0.4 MPa
FUS Mode
pulsed
Pulse duration
10 ms
Duration of a single FUS session
3 minutes
Focal Characteristics
Focal depth: 2–3 mm; Focal length: None; Aperture size: None
Treatment frequency
Multiple
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