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Liposome delivery to the brain with rapid short-pulses of focused ultrasound and microbubbles.

Authors: Morse SV, Mishra A, Chan TG, T M de Rosales R, Choi JJ

Liposomes are clinically used drug carriers designed to improve the delivery of drugs to specific tissues while minimising systemic distribution. However, liposomes are unable to cross the blood-brain barrier (BBB) and enter the brain, mostly due to their large size (ca. 100 nm). A noninvasive and localised method of delivering liposomes across the BBB is to intravenously inject microbubbles and apply long pulses of ultrasound (pulse length: >1 ms) to a targeted brain region. Recently, we have shown that applying rapid short pulses (RaSP) (pulse length: 5 μs) can deliver drugs with an improved efficacy and safety profile. However, this was tested with a relatively smaller 3-kDa molecule (dextran). In this study, we examine whether RaSP can deliver liposomes to the murine brain in vivo. Fluorescent DiD-PEGylated liposomes were synthesized and injected intravenously alongside microbubbles. The left hippocampus of mice was then sonicated with either a RaSP sequence (5 μs at 1.25 kHz in groups of 10 ms at 0.5 Hz) or a long pulse sequence (10 ms at 0.5 Hz), with each pulse having a 1-MHz centre frequency (0.35 and 0.53 MPa). The delivery and distribution of the fluorescently-labelled liposomes were assessed by fluorescence imaging of the brain sections. The safety profile of the sonicated brains was assessed by histological staining. RaSP was shown to locally deliver liposomes across the BBB at 0.53 MPa with a more diffused and safer profile compared to the long pulse ultrasound sequence. Cellular uptake of liposomes was observed in neurons and microglia, while no uptake within astrocytes was observed in both RaSP and long pulse-treated brains. This study shows that RaSP allows a targeted and safe delivery of liposomal drugs into the murine brain with potential to deliver drugs into neuronal and glial targets.

Introduction

Purpose drug delivery with BBB opening
Study Objective Compare rapid short-pulse (RaSP) vs long-pulse focused ultrasound for delivery of PEGylated liposomes (~100 nm) across the blood-brain barrier to the mouse hippocampus, assessing efficacy, distribution, cellular uptake, and safety
Animal model / Human subject C57BL/6 mouse, female, 8-12 weeks, 19.9±0.6 g
Disease model healthy
MRI or image guidance method Yes (stereotactic)
Targeted brain region(s) Hippocampus
Target coordinates 3 mm lateral from sagittal suture, 0.5 mm anterior to lambdoid suture, 3 mm inferior to skull
Cargo name and characteristics fluorescent DiD-labeled+U93:W93 PEGylated liposomes (DPLs), ~100 nm diameter, lipid composition similar to Doxil/Caelyx
Route of administration intravenous (tail vein)

Outcomes and Safety

Summary of Outcomes RaSP (5 µs pulses, 1.25 kHz PRF, 10 ms bursts, 0.5 Hz) delivered liposomes at 0.53 MPa (but not at 0.35 MPa). Long pulses delivered at both pressures. RaSP produced more homogeneous distribution, no detectable tissue damage (H&E), while long pulses caused red blood cell extravasation, microvacuolation, and dark neurons. Liposomes were taken up by neurons and microglia (but not astrocytes) with both sequences. RaSP is a safer alternative for liposomal delivery to the brain.
Duration of biological effect none

Brain Region

Ultrasound Parameters

Ultrasound instrument Sonic Concepts single-element spherical-segment focused transducer, 1 MHz, focal depth 60.5 mm, diameter 90 mm
FUS Frequency 1MHz
FUS Pressure 0.53MPa (effective) 0.35 MPa or 0.53 MPa (peak negative pressure, corrected for skull attenuation)
FUS Mode pulsed
Duration of a single FUS session 250s (calculated)
Focal Characteristics FWHM: axial 20 mm, lateral 2 mm, elevational 1 mm
Treatment frequency single session

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