Sonoselective transfection of cerebral vasculature without blood-brain barrier disruption.
Authors: Gorick CM, Mathew AS, Garrison WJ, Thim EA, Fisher DG, Copeland CA, Song J, Klibanov AL, Miller GW, Price RJ
Treatment of many pathologies of the brain could be improved markedly by the development of noninvasive therapeutic approaches that elicit robust, endothelial cell-selective gene expression in specific brain regions that are targeted under MR image guidance. While focused ultrasound (FUS) in conjunction with gas-filled microbubbles (MBs) has emerged as a noninvasive modality for MR image-guided gene delivery to the brain, it has been used exclusively to transiently disrupt the blood-brain barrier (BBB), which may induce a sterile inflammation response. Here, we introduce an MR image-guided FUS method that elicits endothelial-selective transfection of the cerebral vasculature (i.e., "sonoselective" transfection), without opening the BBB. We first determined that activating circulating, cationic plasmid-bearing MBs with pulsed low-pressure (0.1 MPa) 1.1-MHz FUS facilitates sonoselective gene delivery to the endothelium without MRI-detectable disruption of the BBB. The degree of endothelial selectivity varied inversely with the FUS pressure, with higher pressures (i.e., 0.3-MPa and 0.4-MPa FUS) consistently inducing BBB opening and extravascular transfection. Bulk RNA sequencing analyses revealed that the sonoselective low-pressure regimen does not up-regulate inflammatory or immune responses. Single-cell RNA sequencing indicated that the transcriptome of sonoselectively transfected brain endothelium was unaffected by the treatment. The approach developed here permits targeted gene delivery to blood vessels and could be used to promote angiogenesis, release endothelial cell-secreted factors to stimulate nerve regrowth, or recruit neural stem cells.
Introduction
Purpose
drug delivery without BBB opening
Study Objective
To develop a method for endothelial-selective gene transfection in cerebral vasculature without disrupting the blood-brain barrier.
Animal model / Human subject
Male C57BL/6 mice
Disease model
healthy
MRI or image guidance method
both MRI-guided and stereotactic method were utilized with isolate device
Targeted brain region(s)
Striatum
Cargo name and characteristics
injection of conjugated MBs with mCherry, mRuby, or luciferase plasmid, followed by injection of additional free plasmids
Route of administration
intravenous
Outcomes and Safety
Summary of Outcomes
Low-pressure (0.1 MPa) FUS combined with cationic microbubbles achieved highly selective (~90%) transfection of cerebrovascular endothelium without MRI-detectable BBB opening or induction of inflammatory/immune responses, as confirmed by bulk and single-cell RNA sequencing.
Safety-related matter
The 0.1 MPa “sonoselective” regimen caused no detectable BBB opening, sterile inflammation, or significant alteration of the endothelial transcriptome. Higher pressures (≥0.3 MPa) induced BBB opening and inflammatory pathways.
Brain Region
Ultrasound Parameters
Ultrasound instrument
MRI-guided: single element focused transducer, product from FUS Instruments
Stereotactic based: spherical-face single-element FUS transducer with diameter of 4.5cm, product from Olympus
FUS Frequency
MRI-guided: 1.1MHz
Stereotactic based: 1MHz
FUS Intensity
0.1 MPa PNP (peak negative pressure
FUS Pressure
0.1MPa
FUS Mode
pulsed
Pulse duration
Both: 10ms
Duration of a single FUS session
both: 120s (2mins)
Focal Characteristics
MRI-guided transducer: none
Stereotactic transducer: Axial beamwidth: 15 mm, transverse beamwidth: 4 mm (6-dB, for stereotactic system)
Treatment frequency
single session: 2 mins
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