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Transcriptomic response of brain tissue to focused ultrasound-mediated blood-brain barrier disruption depends strongly on anesthesia.

Authors: Mathew AS, Gorick CM, Thim EA, Garrison WJ, Klibanov AL, Miller GW, Sheybani ND, Price RJ

Focused ultrasound (FUS) mediated blood-brain barrier disruption (BBBD) targets the delivery of systemically-administered therapeutics to the central nervous system. Preclinical investigations of BBBD have been performed on different anesthetic backgrounds; however, the influence of the choice of anesthetic on the molecular response to BBBD is unknown, despite its potential to critically affect interpretation of experimental therapeutic outcomes. Here, using bulk RNA sequencing, we comprehensively examined the transcriptomic response of both normal brain tissue and brain tissue exposed to FUS-induced BBBD in mice anesthetized with either isoflurane with medical air (Iso) or ketamine/dexmedetomidine (KD). In normal murine brain tissue, Iso alone elicited minimal differential gene expression (DGE) and repressed pathways associated with neuronal signaling. KD alone, however, led to massive DGE and enrichment of pathways associated with protein synthesis. In brain tissue exposed to BBBD (1 MHz, 0.5 Hz pulse repetition frequency, 0.4 MPa peak-negative pressure), we systematically evaluated the relative effects of anesthesia, microbubbles, and FUS on the transcriptome. Of particular interest, we observed that gene sets associated with sterile inflammatory responses and cell-cell junctional activity were induced by BBBD, regardless of the choice of anesthesia. Meanwhile, gene sets associated with metabolism, platelet activity, tissue repair, and signaling pathways, were differentially affected by BBBD, with a strong dependence on the anesthetic. We conclude that the underlying transcriptomic response to FUS-mediated BBBD may be powerfully influenced by anesthesia. These findings raise considerations for the translation of FUS-BBBD delivery approaches that impact, in particular, metabolism, tissue repair, and intracellular signaling.

Introduction

Purpose Drug delivery with BBB opening
Study Objective To determine how the choice of anesthetic (isoflurane vs ketamine/dexmedetomidine) influences the transcriptomic response of mouse brain tissue to focused ultrasound–mediated blood–brain barrier disruption.
Animal model / Human subject Mouse, C56BL/6 (Mus musculus); strain: not specified; age: 11 weeks old; sex: female
Disease model healthy
MRI or image guidance method MRI-guided
Targeted brain region(s) Striatum

Outcomes and Safety

Summary of Outcomes MRgFUS BBBD with microbubbles induced sterile inflammation, endothelial activation and cell‑junction/repair transcriptional programs in mouse brain with strong anesthesia dependence (KD elicited massive differential gene expression and protein‑synthesis pathway enrichment, whereas Iso produced minimal DGE and repressed neuronal signaling), and 0.4 MPa produced minimal histological damage while 0.8 MPa caused overt tissue injury.
Safety-related matter BBB opening at 0.4 Mpa caused minimal histological damage under both anesthetics, while 0.8 Mpa caused tissue injury, sterile inflammatory responses were observed with anesthesia-dependent differences

Brain Region

Ultrasound Parameters

Ultrasound instrument 1.1 MHz single-element focused transducer (FUS Instruments, Toronto, Canada); stereotactic tabletop FUS system
FUS Frequency 1 MHz
FUS Pressure 0.4 MPa
FUS Mode pulsed
Pulse duration 10 ms
Duration of a single FUS session 2 minutes
Focal Characteristics Focal depth: None; Focal length: None; Aperture size: None
Treatment frequency single session

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