Pitt Shield

Incisionless targeted adeno-associated viral vector delivery to the brain by focused ultrasound-mediated intranasal administration.

Authors: Ye D, Yuan J, Yang Y, Yue Y, Hu Z, Fadera S, Chen H

Adeno-associated viral (AAV) vectors are currently the leading platform for gene therapy with the potential to treat a variety of central nervous system (CNS) diseases. There are numerous methods for delivering AAVs to the CNS, such as direct intracranial injection (DI), intranasal delivery (IN), and intravenous injection with focused ultrasound-induced blood-brain barrier disruption (FUS-BBBD). However, non-invasive and efficient delivery of AAVs to the brain with minimal systemic toxicity remain the major challenge. This study aims to investigate the potential of focused ultrasound-mediated intranasal delivery (FUSIN) in AAV delivery to brain. Mice were intranasally administered with AAV5 encoding enhanced green fluorescence protein (AAV5-EGFP) followed by FUS sonication in the presence of systemically injected microbubbles. Mouse brains and other major organs were harvested for immunohistological staining, PCR quantification, and in situ hybridization. The AAV delivery outcomes were compared with those of DI, FUS-BBBD, and IN delivery. FUSIN achieved safe and efficient delivery of AAV5-EGFP to spatially targeted brain locations, including a superficial brain site (cortex) and a deep brain region (brainstem). FUSIN achieved comparable delivery outcomes as the established DI, and displayed 414.9-fold and 2073.7-fold higher delivery efficiency than FUS-BBBD and IN. FUSIN was associated with minimal biodistribution in peripheral organs, which was comparable to that of DI. Our results suggest that FUSIN is a promising technique for non-invasive, efficient, safe, and spatially targeted AAV delivery to the brain. National Institutes of Health (NIH) grants R01EB027223, R01EB030102, R01MH116981, and UG3MH126861.

Introduction

Purpose Drug delivery WITHOUT BBB opening
Study Objective To evaluate whether focused ultrasound-mediated intranasal delivery (FUSIN) can non-invasively, efficiently, and spatially target adeno-associated viral (AAV) delivery to mouse brain regions.
Animal model / Human subject mouse, Cr.NIH (Swiss), 6–8 weeks, female
Disease model healthy
MRI or image guidance method B-mode ultrasound image guidance with a co-axially aligned imaging probe and metal grid aligned to the skull lambda, combined with a stereotaxic frame and stereotactic coordinates (depth measured on B-mode) to target cortex and brainstem.
Targeted brain region(s) Cortex
Target coordinates Targets relative to lambda: Cortex — AP +6.0 mm (frontal), ML +0.8 mm (right), DV 0.5 mm from skull; Brainstem — AP -1.0 mm (posterior), ML +1.3 mm (right), DV 4.0 mm from skull. DI coordinates: determined from mouse brain atlas (not listed).
Cargo name and characteristics AAV
Route of administration Intravenous

Outcomes and Safety

Summary of Outcomes FUSIN enabled spatially targeted and efficient AAV5 delivery to the mouse cortex and brainstem
Duration of biological effect 1 month
Safety-related matter FUSIN was safe and non-invasive with minimal systemic biodistribution compared to FUS-BBBD.

Brain Region

Ultrasound Parameters

Ultrasound instrument VIFU 2000 FUS system
FUS Frequency 1.5 MHz
FUS Intensity 0.21 W/cm²
FUS Pressure 0.43 MPa
FUS Mode pulsed
Pulse duration 6.7 ms
Duration of a single FUS session 4 minutes
Focal Characteristics 60 mm
Treatment frequency Single session

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