4.6 Article

Intrathecal antibody distribution in the rat brain: surface diffusion, perivascular transport and osmotic enhancement of delivery

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY-LONDON
Volume 596, Issue 3, Pages 445-475

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1113/JP275105

Keywords

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Funding

  1. University of Wisconsin-Madison School of Pharmacy
  2. NIH National Centre for Advancing Translational Sciences [NIH UL1TR000427, KL2TR00428]
  3. German Research Foundation [EXC 1003]
  4. SVDs@target consortium - European Union's Horizon research and innovation programme [666881]
  5. National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship [DGE-1256259]
  6. NIH [NRSA T32 EBO11434]
  7. PhRMA Foundation fellowship

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The precise mechanisms governing the central distribution of macromolecules from the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) to the brain and spinal cord remain poorly understood, despite their importance for physiological processes such as antibody trafficking for central immune surveillance, as well as several ongoing intrathecal clinical trials. In the present study, we clarify how IgG and smaller single-domain antibodies (sdAb) distribute throughout the whole brain in a size-dependent manner after intrathecal infusion in rats using exvivo fluorescence and invivo three-dimensional magnetic resonance imaging. Antibody distribution was characterized by diffusion at the brain surface and widespread distribution to deep brain regions along the perivascular spaces of all vessel types, with sdAb accessing a four- to seven-fold greater brain area than IgG. Perivascular transport involved blood vessels of all caliber and putative smooth muscle and astroglial basement membrane compartments. Perivascular access to smooth muscle basement membrane compartments also exhibited size-dependence. Electron microscopy was used to show stomata on leptomeningeal coverings of blood vessels in the subarachnoid space as potential access points allowing substances in the CSF to enter the perivascular space. Osmolyte co-infusion significantly enhanced perivascular access of the larger antibody from the CSF, with intrathecal 0.75m mannitol increasing the number of perivascular profiles per slice area accessed by IgG by approximate to 50%. The results of the present study reveal potential distribution mechanisms for endogenous IgG, which is one of the most abundant proteins in the CSF, as well as provide new insights with respect to understanding and improving the drug delivery of macromolecules to the central nervous system via the intrathecal route.

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