Pitt Shield

Low-frequency ultrasound-mediated blood-brain barrier opening enables non-invasive lipid nanoparticle RNA delivery to glioblastoma.

Authors: Shumer-Elbaz M, Ad-El N, Chulanova Y, Brier D, Goldsmith M, Bismuth M, Brosque A, Gattegno R, Sher D, Gutkin A, Bar-On D, Friedmann-Morvinski D, Peer D, Ilovitsh T

Ionizable Lipid Nanoparticles (LNP) are an FDA-approved non-viral RNA delivery system, though their use for brain therapy is restricted by the blood-brain barrier (BBB). Focused ultrasound combined with microbubbles can disrupt the BBB, but delivering large particles requires balancing increased peak negative pressures while maintaining microvascular integrity. Herein, we optimized low-frequency focused ultrasound (FUS) parameters to induce high-amplitude microbubble oscillations, enabling the safe delivery of LNPs across the BBB. First, BBB opening was assessed at different frequencies (850, 250, and 80 kHz) and pressures by monitoring the extravasation of Evans blue (∼1 kDa). Next, the delivery of 4, 70, and 150 kDa Dextrans, LNPs entrapping Cy5-siRNAs (∼70 nm in diameter), and LNPs entrapping mRNA (∼100 nm in diameter) was evaluated via microscopy and bioluminescence. Two types of LNPs containing different ionizable lipids (SM-102 and Lipid-14) were compared and both achieved successful brain delivery following FUS-mediated BBB opening. In a glioblastoma syngeneic mouse model, where the BBB remains largely intact under baseline conditions, siRNA-Cy5-LNP was successfully delivered. A frequency of 850 kHz and 180 kPa pressure induced safe BBB opening, enabling delivery of both small molecules and LNPs. In healthy brains, LNP entrapping siRNAs delivery increased 10-fold compared to controls, and LNPs with mRNAs showed a 12-fold increase in bioluminescence after 24 h. In glioblastoma tumors, LNPs with siRNAs delivery resulted in a 6.7-fold increase in fluorescence. This study paves the way for non-invasive LNP delivery to the brain, offering a versatile platform for brain therapies.

Introduction

Purpose Drug delivery with BBB opening
Study Objective To determine whether low-frequency ultrasound-mediated opening of the blood-brain barrier can non-invasively enable lipid nanoparticle RNA delivery to glioblastoma.
Animal model / Human subject Female C57BL/6J mice (8-12 weeks, 19-23g)
Disease model glioblastoma
MRI or image guidance method Low-frequency ultrasound guidance (ultrasound-mediated BBB opening)
Targeted brain region(s) Hemisphere
Target coordinates Not specified.
Cargo name and characteristics Lipid nanoparticles delivering RNA (LNP; nanoparticle carrying RNA payload)
Route of administration Not specified in provided text

Outcomes and Safety

Summary of Outcomes Low-frequency ultrasound-mediated opening of the blood–brain barrier enables non-invasive delivery of lipid nanoparticle-encapsulated RNA to glioblastoma, promoting RNA access/penetration into brain tumor tissue and thereby facilitating potential therapeutic RNA uptake and expression within the tumor without surgical intervention.
Duration of biological effect not reported in the provided text Bioluminescence signal measured 24 hour after treatment
Safety-related matter 180 KPa and under: no microhemorrhage damage, but 400kpa cause damage. Microbubbles < 5 um. BBBO safe at 850kHz and 180kPa

Brain Region

Ultrasound Parameters

Ultrasound instrument Spherically focused single-element transducer (H-115, Sonic Concepts)
FUS Frequency 850 kHz
FUS Intensity Not reported in provided text
FUS Pressure 180 kPa
FUS Mode pulsed
Pulse duration 1 ms
Duration of a single FUS session 60 s
Focal Characteristics Not specified in the provided text.
Treatment frequency single session

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