4.7 Article

High-Frequency Irreversible Electroporation (H-FIRE) Induced Blood-Brain Barrier Disruption Is Mediated by Cytoskeletal Remodeling and Changes in Tight Junction Protein Regulation

期刊

BIOMEDICINES
卷 10, 期 6, 页码 -

出版社

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/biomedicines10061384

关键词

high-frequency irreversible electroporation (H-FIRE); blood-brain barrier; glioma; intracranial drug delivery

资金

  1. Internal Research Competition Grant (Virginia Tech)
  2. NIH/NCI [R01CA213423, P01CA207206, P30CA012197]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Glioblastoma is a deadly malignant brain tumor that is difficult to treat effectively. A novel method called H-FIRE has been discovered to temporarily disrupt the blood-brain barrier, allowing for better delivery of chemotherapy drugs. The study found that H-FIRE can permeate the blood-brain barrier through cytoskeletal-mediated tight junction protein modulation, providing a potential application for localized and long-term enhanced intracranial drug delivery.
Glioblastoma is the deadliest malignant brain tumor. Its location behind the blood-brain barrier (BBB) presents a therapeutic challenge by preventing effective delivery of most chemotherapeutics. H-FIRE is a novel tumor ablation method that transiently disrupts the BBB through currently unknown mechanisms. We hypothesized that H-FIRE mediated BBB disruption (BBBD) occurs via cytoskeletal remodeling and alterations in tight junction (TJ) protein regulation. Intracranial H-FIRE was delivered to Fischer rats prior to sacrifice at 1-, 24-, 48-, 72-, and 96 h post-treatment. Cytoskeletal proteins and native and ubiquitinated TJ proteins (TJP) were evaluated using immunoprecipitation, Western blotting, and gene-expression arrays on treated and sham control brain lysates. Cytoskeletal and TJ protein expression were further evaluated with immunofluorescent microscopy. A decrease in the F/G-actin ratio, decreased TJP concentrations, and increased ubiquitination of TJP were observed 1-48 h post-H-FIRE compared to sham controls. By 72-96 h, cytoskeletal and TJP expression recovered to pretreatment levels, temporally corresponding with increased claudin-5 and zonula occludens-1 gene expression. Ingenuity pathway analysis revealed significant dysregulation of claudin genes, centered around claudin-6 in H-FIRE treated rats. In conclusion, H-FIRE is capable of permeating the BBB in a spatiotemporal manner via cytoskeletal-mediated TJP modulation. This minimally invasive technology presents with applications for localized and long-lived enhanced intracranial drug delivery.

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