2022 Annual Meeting
(360i) Microbubbles As Non-Invasive Targets for Blood Brain Barrier Disruption: An in silico investigation
Authors
MBs are one to ten microns in diameter and are composed of a lipid shell encapsulating a hydrophobic gas. MBs transiently permeabilize the BBB by cavitating under ultrasound, which leads to mechanofluidic intrusion of nearby tissue. Despite their promising development for BBBD, the exact underlying mechanisms of MB cavitation have yet to be understood. Recent experiments have shown that after undergoing compression via ultrasound shock waves, MBs experience rapid expansion from internal pressurized gas, leading to intriguing âpatterningâ behavior of MB surface lipids. We employed MD, coupled with enhanced sampling, to explore the origins of this behavior at the atomistic level. Specifically, we describe simulations of flat lipid monolayersârepresenting a magnified portion of the curved MB surface at the nanoscaleâat a gas/solvent interface, and the application of an applied external force to mimic the effects of ultrasound-induced compression and expansion. Our results provide new insights into how MB surface lipids are able to hydrodynamically expand into their surrounding environment without destabilizing their shell structure, thereby minimizing damage to the BBB. These results thus demonstrate the utility of MBs for safely and effectively treating neurological disorders via BBBD.
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