Delivery of Liposomes with Different Sizes to Mice Brain after Sonication by Focused Ultrasound in the Presence of Microbubbles.
Authors: Shen Y, Guo J, Chen G, Chin CT, Chen X, Chen J, Wang F, Chen S, Dan G
Imaging or therapeutic agents larger than the blood-brain barrier's (BBB) exclusion threshold of 400 Da could be delivered locally, non-invasively and reversibly by focused ultrasound (FUS) with circulating microbubbles. The size of agents is an important factor to the delivery outcome using this method. Liposomes are important drug carriers with controllable sizes in a range of nanometers. However, discrepancies among deliveries of intact liposomes with different sizes, especially those larger than 50 nm, across the BBB opened by FUS with microbubbles remain unexplored. In the present study, rhodamine-labeled long-circulating pegylated liposomes with diameters of 55 nm, 120 nm and 200 nm were delivered to mice brains after BBB disruption by pulsed FUS with microbubbles. Four groups of peak rarefactional pressure and microbubble dosages were used: 0.53 MPa with 0.1 μL/g (group 1), 0.53 MPa with 0.5 μL/g (group 2), 0.64 MPa with 0.1 μL/g (group 3) and 0.64 MPa with 0.5 μL/g (group 4). The delivery outcome was observed using fluorescence imaging of brain sections. It was found that the delivery of 55-nm liposomes showed higher success rates than 120-nm or 200-nm liposomes from groups 1-3. The result indicated that it may be more difficult to deliver larger liposomes (>120 nm) passively than 55-nm liposomes after BBB opening by FUS with microbubbles. The relative fluorescence area of 55-nm liposomes to the total area of the sonicated region was statistically larger than that of the 120-nm or 200-nm liposomes. Increasing peak rarefactional pressure amplitude or microbubble dose could induce more accumulation of liposomes in the brain using FUS with microbubbles. Moreover, the distribution pattern of delivered liposomes was heterogeneous and characterized by separated fluorescence spots with cloud-like periphery surrounding a bright center, indicating confined diffusion in the extracellular matrix after extravasation from the microvasculature. These findings are expected to provide useful information for developing FUS with microbubbles as an effective trans-BBB liposomal drug delivery strategy.
Introduction
Purpose
Drug delivery with BBB opening
Study Objective
To evaluate delivery of liposomes of different sizes to the mouse brain following focused ultrasound sonication in the presence of microbubbles.
Animal model / Human subject
Mice (Mus musculus); strain: BALB/c; age: 6 weeks old; sex: female
Disease model
Healthy
Targeted brain region(s)
Hemisphere
Cargo name and characteristics
Fluorescently labeled stabilized long-circulating pegylated (PEG) Liposomes (nanoparticle drug delivery vehicles) of varying sizes
Route of administration
Intravenous
Outcomes and Safety
Summary of Outcomes
Focused ultrasound sonication in the presence of microbubbles enabled delivery of liposomes of different sizes into the mouse brain. Successful parameter identified: sonication performed with microbubbles (focused ultrasound + microbubbles).
Safety-related matter
No safety issues or adverse effects are mentioned in the provided text.
Brain Region
Ultrasound Parameters
Ultrasound instrument
Single element spherical transducer
FUS Frequency
1.282 MHz
FUS Pressure
0.53-0.64 Mpa
FUS Mode
pulsed
Pulse duration
7.8 ms
Duration of a single FUS session
60 s
Focal Characteristics
Focal depth: None; Focal length: 51.3 mm; Aperture size: None
Treatment frequency
Single
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