Abstract

At low-intensity levels, ultrasound can potentially generate therapeutic effects on living cells, and it can trigger sonoporation when microbubbles (MBs) are present to facilitate drug delivery. Yet, our foundational knowledge of low-intensity pulsed ultrasound (LIPUS) and sonoporation remains to be critically weak because the pertinent cellular bioeffects have not been rigorously studied. In this article, we present a population-based experimental protocol that can effectively foster investigations on the mechanistic bioeffects of LIPUS and sonoporation over a cell population. Walkthroughs of different methodological details are presented, including the fabrication of the ultrasound exposure platform and its calibration, as well as the design of a bioassay procedure that uses fluorescent tracers and flow cytometry to isolate sonicated cells with similar characteristics. An application example is also presented to illustrate how our protocol can be used to investigate the downstream cellular bioeffects of leukemia cells. We show that, with 1-MHz LIPUS exposure (with 29.1 J/cm2 delivered acoustic energy density), variations in viability and morphology would be found among different types of sonicated leukemia cells (HL-60, Molt-4) in the absence and presence of MBs. Taken altogether, this article provides a reference on how cellular bioeffect experiments on LIPUS and sonoporation can be planned meticulously to acquire strong observations that are critical to establish the biological foundations for therapeutic applications.

Highlights

  • T HE bioeffects of ultrasound pulsing at low-intensity level—an acoustic exposure range sometimes dubbed as low-intensity pulsed ultrasound (LIPUS)—have long been the subject of investigation [1], [2]

  • Variation in Cell Response to LIPUS Exposure After receiving LIPUS exposure from our devised acoustic setup with MBs present in the cell chamber, a fraction of both leukemia cell types expectedly showed an increase in intracellular calcein fluorescence, while some exhibited a high expression of PI fluorescence

  • While the stimulatory effects of LIPUS and the acute impact of sonoporation on the cell membrane are well-known, there has been a chronic shortage of knowledge on the related downstream bioeffects

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Summary

Introduction

T HE bioeffects of ultrasound pulsing at low-intensity level—an acoustic exposure range sometimes dubbed as low-intensity pulsed ultrasound (LIPUS)—have long been the subject of investigation [1], [2].

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