Understanding
the pharmacokinetics of drug candidates of interest
in the brain and evaluating drug delivery to the brain are important
for developing drugs targeting the brain. Previously, we demonstrated
that a CAG repeat-binding small molecule, naphthyridine-azaquinolone
(NA), resulted in repeat contraction in mouse models of dentatorubral–pallidoluysian
atrophy and Huntington’s disease caused by aberrant expansion
of CAG repeats. However, the intracerebral distribution and drug deliverability
of NA remain unclear. Here, we report three-dimensional whole-brain
imaging of an externally administered small molecule using tissue
clearing and light sheet fluorescence microscopy (LSFM). We designed
and synthesized an Alexa594-labeled NA derivative with a primary amine
for whole-brain imaging (NA-Alexa594-NH2), revealing the
intracerebral distribution of NA-Alexa594-NH2 after intraparenchymal
and intracerebroventricular administrations by whole-brain imaging
combined with tissue clearing and LSFM. We also clarified that intranasally
administered NA-Alexa594-NH2 was delivered into the brain
via multiple nose-to-brain pathways by tracking the time-dependent
change in the intracerebral distribution. Whole-brain imaging of small
molecules by tissue clearing and LSFM is useful for elucidating not
only the intracerebral distribution but also the drug delivery pathways
into the brain