Back to Search Start Over

Quantification of Blood-Brain Barrier Solute Permeability and Brain Transport by Multiphoton Microscopy

Authors :
Min Zeng
Lingyan Shi
Bingmei M. Fu
Yi Sun
Source :
Journal of Biomechanical Engineering. 136
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
ASME International, 2014.

Abstract

Development of an optimal systemic drug delivery strategy to the brain will require noninvasive or minimally invasive methods to quantify the permeability of the cerebral microvessel wall or blood-brain barrier (BBB) to various therapeutic agents and to measure their transport in the brain tissue. To address this problem, we used laser-scanning multiphoton microscopy to determine BBB permeability to solutes (P) and effective solute diffusion coefficients (Deff) in rat brain tissue 100‐250lm below the pia mater. The cerebral microcirculation was observed through a section of frontoparietal bone thinned with a microgrinder. Sodium fluorescein, fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC)-dextrans, or Alexa Fluor 488-immunoglobulin G (IgG) in 1% bovine serum albumin (BSA) mammalian Ringer’s solution was injected into the cerebral circulation via the ipsilateral carotid artery by a syringe pump at a constant rate of � 3ml/min. P and Deff were determined from the rate of tissue solute accumulation and the radial concentration gradient around individual microvessels in the brain tissue. The mean apparent permeability P values for sodium fluorescein (molecular weight (MW) 376 Da), dextran-4k, -20k, -40k, -70k, and IgG (MW � 160kDa) were 14.6, 6.2, 1.8, 1.4, 1.3, and 0.54 � 10 � 7 cm/s, respectively. These P values were not significantly different from those of rat pial microvessels for the samesized solutes (Yuan et al., 2009, “Non-Invasive Measurement of Solute Permeability in Cerebral Microvessels of the Rat,” Microvasc. Res., 77(2), pp. 166‐73), except for the small solute sodium fluorescein, suggesting that pial microvessels can be a good model for studying BBB transport of relatively large solutes. The mean Deff values were 33.2, 4.4, 1.3, 0.89, 0.59, and 0.47 � 10 � 7 cm 2 /s, respectively, for sodium fluorescein, dextran4k, -20k, -40k, -70k, and IgG. The corresponding mean ratio of Deff to the free diffusion coefficient Dfree ,D eff/Dfree, were 0.46, 0.19, 0.12, 0.12, 0.11, and 0.11 for these solutes. While there is a significant difference in Deff/Dfree between small (e.g., sodium fluorescein) and larger solutes, there is no significant difference in Deff/Dfree between solutes with molecular weights from 20,000 to 160,000 Da, suggesting that the relative resistance of the brain tissue to macromolecular solutes is similar over a wide size range. The quantitative transport parameters measured from this study can be used to develop better strategies for brain drug delivery. [DOI: 10.1115/1.4025892]

Details

ISSN :
15288951 and 01480731
Volume :
136
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Biomechanical Engineering
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....256b8253a6c6ca143df912a993ea5417
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1115/1.4025892