119 research outputs found

    How sonoporation disrupts cellular structural integrity: morphological and cytoskeletal observations

    Get PDF
    Posters: no. 1Control ID: 1672429OBJECTIVES: In considering sonoporation for drug delivery applications, it is essential to understand how living cells respond to this puncturing force. Here we seek to investigate the effects of sonoporation on cellular structural integrity. We hypothesize that the membrane morphology and cytoskeletal behavior of sonoporated cells under recovery would inherently differ from that of normal viable cells. METHODS: A customized and calibrated exposure platform was developed for this work, and the ZR-75-30 breast carcinoma cells were used as the cell model. The cells were exposed to either single or multiple pulses of 1 MHz ultrasound (pulse length: 30 or 100 cycles; PRF: 1kHz; duration: up to 60s) with 0.45 MPa spatial-averaged peak negative pressure and in the presence of lipid-shelled microbubbles. Confocal microscopy was used to examine insitu the structural integrity of sonoporated cells (identified as ones with exogenous fluorescent marker internalization). For investigations on membrane morphology, FM 4-64 was used as the membrane dye (red), and calcein was used as the sonoporation marker (green); for studies on cytoskeletal behavior, CellLight (green) and propidium iodide (red) were used to respectively label actin filaments and sonoporated cells. Observation started from before exposure to up to 2 h after exposure, and confocal images were acquired at real-time frame rates. Cellular structural features and their temporal kinetics were quantitatively analyzed to assess the consistency of trends amongst a group of cells. RESULTS: Sonoporated cells exhibited membrane shrinkage (decreased by 61% in a cell’s cross-sectional area) and intracellular lipid accumulation (381% increase compared to control) over a 2 h period. The morphological repression of sonoporated cells was also found to correspond with post-sonoporation cytoskeletal processes: actin depolymerization was observed as soon as pores were induced on the membrane. These results show that cellular structural integrity is indeed disrupted over the course of sonoporation. CONCLUSIONS: Our investigation shows that the biophysical impact of sonoporation is by no means limited to the induction of membrane pores: e.g. structural integrity is concomitantly affected in the process. This prompts the need for further fundamental studies to unravel the complex sequence of biological events involved in sonoporation.postprin

    Developmental delays and subcellular stress as downstream effects of sonoporation

    Get PDF
    Posters: no. 2Control ID: 1672434OBJECTIVES: The biological impact of sonoporation has often been overlooked. Here we seek to obtain insight into the cytotoxic impact of sonoporation by gaining new perspectives on anti-proliferative characteristics that may emerge within sonoporated cells. We particularly focused on investigating the cell-cycle progression kinetics of sonoporated cells and identifying organelles that may be stressed in the recovery process. METHODS: In line with recommendations on exposure hardware design, an immersion-based ultrasound platform has been developed. It delivers 1 MHz ultrasound pulses (100 cycles; 1 kHz PRF; 60 s total duration) with 0.45 MPa peak negative pressure to a cell chamber that housed HL-60 leukemia cells and lipid-shelled microbubbles at a 10:1 cell-tobubble ratio (for 1e6/ml cell density). Calcein was used to facilitate tracking of sonoporated cells with enhanced uptake of exogenous molecules. The developmental trend of sonoporated cells was quantitatively analyzed using BrdU/DNA flow cytometry that monitors the cell population’s DNA synthesis kinetics. This allowed us to measure the temporal progression of DNA synthesis of sonoporated cells. To investigate whether sonoporation would upset subcellular homeostasis, post-exposure cell samples were also assayed for various proteins using Western blot analysis. Analysis focus was placed on the endoplasmic reticulum (ER): an important organelle with multi-faceted role in cellular functioning. The post-exposure observation time spanned between 0-24 h. RESULTS: Despite maintaining viability, sonoporated cells were found to exhibit delays in cell-cycle progression. Specifically, their DNA synthesis time was lengthened substantially (for HL-60 cells: 8.7 h for control vs 13.4 h for the sonoporated group). This indicates that sonoporated cells were under stress: a phenomenon that is supported by our Western blot assays showing upregulation of ER-resident enzymes (PDI, Ero1), ER stress sensors (PERK, IRE1), and ER-triggered pro-apoptotic signals (CHOP, JNK). CONCLUSIONS: Sonoporation, whilst being able to facilitate internalization of exogenous molecules, may inadvertently elicit a cellular stress response. These findings seem to echo recent calls for reconsideration of efficiency issues in sonoporation-mediated drug delivery. Further efforts would be necessary to improve the efficiency of sonoporation-based biomedical applications where cell death is not desirable.postprin

    A study on the change in plasma membrane potential during sonoporation

    Get PDF
    Posters: no. 4Control ID: 1680329OBJECTIVES: There has been validated that the correlation of sonoporation with calcium transients is generated by ultrasound-mediated microbubbles activity. Besides calcium, other ionic flows are likely involved in sonoporation. Our hypothesis is the cell electrophysiological properties are related to the intracellular delivery by ultrasound and microbubbles. In this study, a real-time live cell imaging platform is used to determine whether plasma membrane potential change is related to the sonoporation process at the cellular level. METHODS: Hela cells were cultured in DMEM supplemented with 10% FBS in Opticell Chamber at 37 °C and 5% CO2, and reached 80% confluency before experiments. The Calcein Blue-AM, DiBAC4(3) loaded cells in the Opticell chamber filled with PI solution and Sonovue microbubbles were immerged in a water tank on a inverted fluorescence microscope. Pulsed ultrasound (1MHz freq., 20 cycles, 20Hz PRF, 0.2-0.5MPa PNP) was irradiated at the angle of 45° to the region of interest for 1s.The real-time fluorescence imaging for different probes was acquired by a cooled CCD camera every 20s for 10min. The time-lapse fluorescence images were quantitatively analyzed to evaluate the correlation of cell viability, intracellular delivery with plasma membrane potential change. RESULTS: Our preliminary data showed that the PI fluorescence, which indicated intracellular delivery, was immediately accumulated in cells adjacent to microbubbles after exposure, suggesting that their membranes were damaged by ultrasound-activated microbubbles. However, the fluorescence reached its highest level within 4 to 6 minutes and was unchanged thereafter, indicating the membrane was gradually repaired within this period. Furthermore, using DIBAC4(3), which detected the change in the cell membrane potential, we found that the loss of membrane potential might be associated with intracellular delivery, because the PI fluorescence accumulation was usually accompanied with the change in DIBAC4 (3) fluorescence. CONCLUSIONS: Our study suggests that there may be a linkage between the cell membrane potential change and intracellular delivery mediated by ultrasound and microbubbles. We also suggest that other ionic flows or ion channels may be involved in the cell membrane potential change in sonoporation. Further efforts to explore the cellular mechanism of this phenomenon will improve our understanding of sonoporation.postprin

    Real-time imaging of cellular dynamics during low-intensity pulsed ultrasound exposure

    Get PDF
    Control ID: 1671584Oral Session 5 - Bioeffects of therapeutic ultrasoundOBJECTIVE: Although the therapeutic potential of low-intensity pulsed ultrasound is unquestionable, the wave-matter interactions involved in the process remain to be vaguely characterized. Here we seek to undertake a series of in-situ cellular imaging studies that aim to analyze the mechanical impact of low-intensity pulsed ultrasound on attached fibroblasts from three different aspects: membrane, cytoskeleton, and nucleus. METHODS: Our experimental platform comprised an in-house ultrasound exposure hardware that was coupled to a confocal microscopy system. The waveguided ultrasound beam was geometrically aligned to the microscope’s fieldof-view that corresponds to the center of a polystyrene dish containing fibroblasts. Short ultrasound pulses (5 cycles; 2 kHz PRF) with 0.8 MPa peak acoustic pressure (0.21 W/cm2 SPTA intensity) were delivered over a 10 min period. Live imaging was performed on both membrane (CellMask) and cytoskeleton (actin-GFP, tubulin-RFP) over the entire observation period (up to 30 min after end of exposure). Also, pre- and post-exposure fixed-cell imaging was conducted on the nucleus (Hoechst 33342) and two cytoskeleton components related to stress fibers: F-actin (phalloidin-FITC) and vincullin (Alexa Fluor 647 conjugated). To study whether mechanotransduction was responsible in mediating ultrasound-cell interactions, some experiments were conducted with the addition of gadolinium that blocks stretch-sensitive ion channels. RESULTS: Cell shrinkage was evident over the course of low-intensity pulsed ultrasound exposure. This was accompanied with contraction of actin and tubulin. Also, an increase in central stress fibers was observed at the end of exposure, while the nucleus was found to have decreased in size. Interestingly, after the exposure, a significant rebound in cell volume was observed over a 30 min. period. These effects were not observed in cases with gadolinium blockage of mechanosensitive ion channels. CONCLUSIONS: Our results suggest that low-intensity pulsed ultrasound would transiently induce remodeling of a cell’s membrane and cytoskeleton, and it will lead to repression of nucleus. This indicates that ultrasound after all represents a mechanical stress on cellular membrane. The post-exposure outgrowth phenomenon is also of practical relevance as it may be linked to the stimulatory effects that have been already observed in low-intensity pulsed ultrasound treatments.postprin

    Thérapies ultrasonores cardiaques guidées par élastographie et échographie ultrarapides

    Get PDF
    Atrial fibrillation (AF) affects 2-3% of the European and North-American population, whereas ventricular tachyarrhythmia (VT) is related to an important risk of sudden death. AF and VT originate from dysfunctional electrical activity in cardiac tissues. Minimally-invasive approaches such as Radio-Frequency Catheter Ablation (RFCA) have revolutionized the treatment of these diseases; however the success rate of RFCA is currently limited by the lack of monitoring techniques to precisely control the extent of thermally ablated tissue.The aim of this thesis is to propose novel ultrasound-based approaches for minimally invasive cardiac ablation under guidance of ultrasound imaging. For this, first, we validated the accuracy and clinical viability of Shear-Wave Elastography (SWE) as a real-time quantitative imaging modality for thermal ablation monitoring in vivo. Second we implemented SWE on an intracardiac transducer and validated the feasibility of evaluating thermal ablation in vitro and in vivo on beating hearts of a large animal model. Third, a dual-mode intracardiac transducer was developed to perform both ultrasound therapy and imaging with the same elements, on the same device. SWE-controlled High-Intensity-Focused-Ultrasound thermal lesions were successfully performed in vivo in the atria and the ventricles of a large animal model. At last, SWE was implemented on a transesophageal ultrasound imaging and therapy device and the feasibility of transesophageal approach was demonstrated in vitro and in vivo. These novel approaches may lead to new clinical devices for a safer and controlled treatment of a wide variety of cardiac arrhythmias and diseases.La fibrillation atriale affecte 2-3% des europĂ©ens et nord-amĂ©ricains, les tachycardies ventriculaires sont liĂ©es Ă  un risque important de mort subite. Les approches minimalement invasives comme l’Ablation par CathĂ©ter RadiofrĂ©quence (RFCA) ont rĂ©volutionnĂ© le traitement de ces maladies, mais le taux de rĂ©ussite de la RFCA est limitĂ© par le manque de techniques d’imagerie pour contrĂŽler cette ablation thermique.Le but de cette thĂšse est de proposer de nouvelles approches ultrasonores pour des traitements cardiaques minimalement invasifs guidĂ©s par Ă©chographie.Pour cela nous avons d’abord validĂ© la prĂ©cision et la viabilitĂ© clinique de l’Élastographie par Ondes de Cisaillement (SWE) en tant que modalitĂ© d’imagerie quantitative et temps rĂ©el pour l’ablation thermique in vivo. Ensuite nous avons implĂ©mentĂ© la SWE sur un transducteur intracardiaque et validĂ© la faisabilitĂ© d’évaluer l’ablation thermique in vitro et in vivo sur cƓur battant de gros animal. Puis nous avons dĂ©veloppĂ© un transducteur intracardiaque dual-mode pour effectuer l’ablation et l’imagerie ultrasonores avec les mĂȘmes Ă©lĂ©ments, sur le mĂȘme dispositif. Les lĂ©sions thermiques induites par Ultrasons FocalisĂ©s de Haute IntensitĂ© (HIFU) et contrĂŽlĂ©es par la SWE ont Ă©tĂ© rĂ©alisĂ©es avec succĂšs in vivo dans les oreillettes et les ventricules chez le gros animal. Finalement la SWE a Ă©tĂ© implĂ©mentĂ©e sur un dispositif d’imagerie et thĂ©rapie ultrasonores transƓsophagien et la faisabilitĂ© de cette approche a Ă©tĂ© dĂ©montrĂ©e in vitro et in vivo. Ces approches originales pourraient conduire Ă  de nouveaux dispositifs cliniques pour des traitements plus sĂ»rs et contrĂŽlĂ©s d’un large Ă©ventail d’arythmies et maladies cardiaques

    Anniversary Paper: Evolution of ultrasound physics and the role of medical physicists and the AAPM and its journal in that evolution

    Full text link
    Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/134810/1/mp2048.pd
    • 

    corecore