Quantitative Pharmacokinetics Reveal Impact of Lipid Composition on Microbubble and Nanoprogeny Shell Fate

Adv Sci (Weinh). 2024 Jan;11(4):e2304453. doi: 10.1002/advs.202304453. Epub 2023 Nov 30.

Abstract

Microbubble-enabled focused ultrasound (MB-FUS) has revolutionized nano and molecular drug delivery capabilities. Yet, the absence of longitudinal, systematic, quantitative studies of microbubble shell pharmacokinetics hinders progress within the MB-FUS field. Microbubble radiolabeling challenges contribute to this void. This barrier is overcome by developing a one-pot, purification-free copper chelation protocol able to stably radiolabel diverse porphyrin-lipid-containing Definity® analogues (pDefs) with >95% efficiency while maintaining microbubble physicochemical properties. Five tri-modal (ultrasound-, positron emission tomography (PET)-, and fluorescent-active) [64 Cu]Cu-pDefs are created with varying lipid acyl chain length and charge, representing the most prevalently studied microbubble compositions. In vitro, C16 chain length microbubbles yield 2-3x smaller nanoprogeny than C18 microbubbles post FUS. In vivo, [64 Cu]Cu-pDefs are tracked in healthy and 4T1 tumor-bearing mice ± FUS over 48 h qualitatively through fluorescence imaging (to characterize particle disruption) and quantitatively through PET and γ-counting. These studies reveal the impact of microbubble composition and FUS on microbubble dissolution rates, shell circulation, off-target tissue retention (predominantly the liver and spleen), and FUS enhancement of tumor delivery. These findings yield pharmacokinetic microbubble structure-activity relationships that disrupt conventional knowledge, the implications of which on MB-FUS platform design, safety, and nanomedicine delivery are discussed.

Keywords: Microbubbles; Pharmacokinetics; drug-delivery; focused ultrasound; radiolabeling.

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Copper
  • Lipids / chemistry
  • Mice
  • Microbubbles*
  • Neoplasms*
  • Ultrasonography

Substances

  • Copper
  • Lipids