Thermosensitive
Biodegradable Hydrogels for Local
and Controlled Cerebral Delivery of Proteins: MRI-Based Monitoring
of In Vitro and In Vivo Protein
Release
posted on 2023-01-22, 19:03authored byPavel Yanev, Geralda A.F. van Tilborg, Kristel W. M. Boere, Ann M. Stowe, Annette van der Toorn, Max A. Viergever, Wim E. Hennink, Tina Vermonden, Rick M. Dijkhuizen
Hydrogels have been suggested as novel drug delivery
systems for
sustained release of therapeutic proteins in various neurological
disorders. The main advantage these systems offer is the controlled,
prolonged exposure to a therapeutically effective dose of the released
drug after a single intracerebral injection. Characterization of controlled
release of therapeutics from a hydrogel is generally performed in vitro, as current methods do not allow for in
vivo measurements of spatiotemporal distribution and release
kinetics of a loaded protein. Importantly, the in vivo environment introduces many additional variables and factors that
cannot be effectively simulated under in vitro conditions.
To address this, in the present contribution, we developed a noninvasive in vivo magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) method to monitor
local protein release from two injected hydrogels of the same chemical
composition but different initial water contents. We designed a biodegradable
hydrogel formulation composed of low and high concentration thermosensitive
polymer and thiolated hyaluronic acid, which is liquid at room temperature
and forms a gel due to a combination of physical and chemical cross-linking
upon injection at 37 °C. The in vivo protein
release kinetics from these gels were assessed by MRI analysis utilizing
a model protein labeled with an MR contrast agent, i.e. gadolinium-labeled
albumin (74 kDa). As proof of principle, the release kinetics of the
hydrogels were first measured with MRI in vitro.
Subsequently, the protein loaded hydrogels were administered in male
Wistar rat brains and the release in vivo was monitored
for 21 days. In vitro, the thermosensitive hydrogels
with an initial water content of 81 and 66% released 64 ± 3%
and 43 ± 3% of the protein loading, respectively, during the
first 6 days at 37 °C. These differences were even more profound in vivo, where the thermosensitive hydrogels released 83
± 16% and 57 ± 15% of the protein load, respectively, 1
week postinjection. Measurement of volume changes of the gels over
time showed that the thermosensitive gel with the higher polymer concentration
increased more than 4-fold in size in vivo after
3 weeks, which was substantially different from the in vitro behavior where a volume change of 35% was observed. Our study demonstrates
the potential of MRI to noninvasively monitor in vivo intracerebral protein release from a locally administered in situ
forming hydrogel, which could aid in the development and optimization
of such drug delivery systems for brain disorders.