| Literature DB >> 34769180 |
Guigen Liu1, Veronica Valvo1, Sebastian W Ahn1, Devon Thompson1, Kyle Deans1, Jeon Woong Kang2, Sharath Bhagavatula1, Christine Dominas1, Oliver Jonas1.
Abstract
Advances in the intratumor measurement of drug responses have included a pioneering biomedical microdevice for high throughput drug screening in vivo, which was further advanced by integrating a graded-index lens based two-dimensional fluorescence micro-endoscope to monitor tissue responses in situ across time. While the previous system provided a bulk measurement of both drug delivery and tissue response from a given region of the tumor, it was incapable of visualizing drug distribution and tissue responses in a three-dimensional (3D) way, thus missing the critical relationship between drug concentration and effect. Here we demonstrate a next-generation system that couples multiplexed intratumor drug release with continuous 3D spatial imaging of the tumor microenvironment via the integration of a miniaturized two-photon micro-endoscope. This enables optical sectioning within the live tissue microenvironment to effectively profile the entire tumor region adjacent to the microdevice across time. Using this novel microimaging-microdevice (MI-MD) system, we successfully demonstrated the four-dimensional imaging (3 spatial dimensions plus time) of local drug delivery in tissue phantom and tumors. Future studies include the use of the MI-MD system for monitoring of localized intra-tissue drug release and concurrent measurement of tissue responses in live organisms, with applications to study drug resistance due to nonuniform drug distribution in tumors, or immune cell responses to anti-cancer agents.Entities:
Keywords: biomedical microdevice; in vivo testing; local drug delivery; optical sectioning; tumors; two-photon micro-endoscopy
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34769180 PMCID: PMC8584268 DOI: 10.3390/ijms222111752
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Two-photon MI-MD system for local drug delivery testing. (a) Schematic of the whole system, (b) close-up view of the MI-MD assembly. PMT, photomultiplier tube.
Figure 2Characterization of the microimaging system. (a) FOV and (b) WD as a function of the drive current of the ETL, (c) lateral (i.e., x and y directions) and (d) axial (i.e., z direction) resolution.
Figure 34D imaging of local doxorubicin delivery in breast tissue phantom using the developed MI-MD system. (a) Schematic (left) and image of the drug-loaded microdevice (middle) and cross-sectional view around the reservoir level after the testing (right). The region for imaging is designated roughly by the dashed squares. (b) Temporal evolution of the drug diffusion process captured by the MI-MD system. Orientation of the imaging probe relative to the FOV is shown on the right. (c) On-axis drug diffusion dynamics along z axis. (d) Temporal evolution of the on-axis drug signal at a few different z positions. (e) Ratio of on-axis signal intensity at 8 h to that at 12 h in (d) as a function of axial position.
Figure 44D imaging of local doxorubicin delivery in murine tumors using the developed MI-MD system. (a) Drug loading diagram and the delivery processes captured by the MI-MD system. Dimensions of the FOV and orientation of the imaging probe relative to the FOV are identical to those in Figure 3b. (b) Variation of the overall fluorescence signal for both the doxorubicin compound and pure PEG and (c) their ratio as a function of time.
Figure 5Optical sectioning of the local drug delivery process in tumor. The same images are displayed with (a) individual color bars (not shown) for better visualization of the microstructure and (b) a common color bar for direct comparison of signal level.
Figure 6Characterization of the nonuniform signal efficiency. (a) A 3D image of a uniform fluorescein solution. Dimensions and orientation of the FOV are identical to those in Figure 3b, see also the coordinate system in the inset of Figure 1a. (b) On-axis signal intensity distribution along the z direction. Lateral signal intensity distribution along (c) x and (d) y direction at different z positions.
Figure 7Effective correction for nonuniform signal efficiency by normalization. A 3D image of a uniform 10 µg/mL doxorubicin solution before (a) and after (b) normalization.