Microbubble drug conjugate and focused ultrasound blood brain barrier delivery of AAV-2 SIRT-3 |
| |
Authors: | Dennison Trinh Joanne Nash David Goertz Kullervo Hynynen Sharsi Bulner Umar Iqbal James Keenan |
| |
Affiliation: | aDepartment of Biological Sciences, University of Toronto at Scarborough, Scarborough, Canada;bSunnybrook Research Institute, Toronto, Canada;cDepartment of Medical Biophysics, University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada;dHuman Health Therapeutics Research Centre, National Research Council of Canada, Ottawa, Canada;eArtenga Inc, Ottawa, Canada |
| |
Abstract: | BackgroundDelivery of viral vectors as gene therapies to treat neurodegenerative diseases has been hampered by the inability to penetrate the blood brain barrier (BBB) and invasive or non-targeted delivery options prone to inducing immune responses. MR guided focused ultrasound (MR-g-FUS) and microbubbles have demonstrated safe, temporary, targeted BBB permeabilization clinically.MethodsWe developed clinically scalable, microbubble drug conjugates (MDCs) for the viral gene therapy, AAV.SIRT3-myc [adeno-associated virus expressing myc-tagged SIRT3], which has previously been shown to have disease modifying effects in animal models of Parkinson’s disease (PD). The lipid shells of the perfluorocarbon gas MDCs were covalently conjugated to antibodies with binding specificity to AAVs. Following systemic (iv) delivery of AAV.SIRT3-myc MDCs, MR-g-FUS was used to deliver SIRT3-myc to brain regions affected in PD. SIRT3-myc expression was determined post mortem, using immunohistochemistry.ResultsAn in vitro, SH-SY5Y cell culture model was used to show that the localized destruction of MDCs using ultrasound exposures within biological safety limits dissociated AAV2-GFP (green fluorescent protein) from the MDCs in the targeted area while maintaining their transduction capacity. In rats, MR-g-FUS resulted in BBB permeabilization in the striatum and substantia nigra (SNc). SIRT3-myc was expressed in the striatum, but not the SNc.ConclusionThese studies demonstrate that MDCs combined with MR-g-FUS are an effective method for delivery of viral vector gene therapies, such as AAV.SIRT3, to brain regions affected in PD. This technology may prove useful as a disease-modifying strategy in PD and other neurodegenerative disorders. |
| |
Keywords: | Focused ultrasound, microbubbles, BBB drug delivery, Sirtuin3, SIRT3, Parkinson’ s |
|
|