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Sonoporation Using Nanoparticle-Loaded Microbubbles Increases Cellular Uptake of Nanoparticles Compared to Co-Incubation of Nanoparticles and Microbubbles

Authors :
Ýrr Mørch
Astrid Bjørkøy
Sigurd Hanstad
Sofie Snipstad
Catharina de Lange Davies
Source :
Pharmaceutics, Pharmaceutics, Vol 13, Iss 640, p 640 (2021), Volume 13, Issue 5
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Therapeutic agents can benefit from encapsulation in nanoparticles, due to improved pharmacokinetics and biodistribution, protection from degradation, increased cellular uptake and sustained release. Microbubbles in combination with ultrasound have been shown to improve the delivery of nanoparticles and drugs to tumors and across the blood-brain barrier. Here, we evaluate two different microbubbles for enhancing the delivery of polymeric nanoparticles to cells in vitro: a commercially available lipid microbubble (Sonazoid) and a microbubble with a shell composed of protein and nanoparticles. Various ultrasound parameters are applied and confocal microscopy is employed to image cellular uptake. Ultrasound enhanced cellular uptake depending on the pressure and duty cycle. The responsible mechanisms are probably sonoporation and sonoprinting, followed by uptake, and to a smaller degree enhanced endocytosis. The use of commercial Sonazoid microbubbles leads to significantly lower uptake than when using nanoparticle-loaded microbubbles, suggesting that proximity between cells, nanoparticles and microbubbles is important, and that mainly nanoparticles in the shell are taken up, rather than free nanoparticles in solution.

Details

ISSN :
19994923
Volume :
13
Issue :
5
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Pharmaceutics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....291ccba367307c6bda5dfd9f21903963