100% de satisfacción garantizada Inmediatamente disponible después del pago Tanto en línea como en PDF No estas atado a nada 4,6 TrustPilot
logo-home
Resumen

Summary of lectures about drug delivery and development

Puntuación
-
Vendido
-
Páginas
14
Subido en
29-10-2023
Escrito en
2023/2024

summary including pictures

Institución
Grado









Ups! No podemos cargar tu documento ahora. Inténtalo de nuevo o contacta con soporte.

Escuela, estudio y materia

Institución
Estudio
Grado

Información del documento

Subido en
29 de octubre de 2023
Número de páginas
14
Escrito en
2023/2024
Tipo
Resumen

Temas

Vista previa del contenido

Week 2 Drug delivery & development
SMDs/biologics

LE Drug Targeting and Delivery (Part I) (Rik Oude Egberink)
Classical drugs (like paracetamol) are small organic molecules that are usually lipophilic enough to
cross membranes (distribute well throughout body). They act by inhibiting enzymes/receptors. If you
want to use (m)RNA as drugs (they are not drugs by themselves), they need a transport vehicle or
you make a nanoparticle of the RNA.

SiRNA is negatively charged and large thus it cannot get into the cell, but if it can enter the cell via a
transport way it can act as a drug.

Risk of side effects by

- Insufficient specificity (cross reactivity with other targets) because it can distribute well
thoughout the body
- Inhibition of important metabolic routes in non-target organs

Classical drugs are poor inhibitors of protein-protein interactions due to large surface area and weak
binding of the proteins. Classical drugs need deep pockets for binding. So bigger proteins are needed
(like antibodies). Oligonucleotides (such as mRNA)offer a very straightforward way to inhibit/change
protein expression.

Drug targeting goal is to enhance concentration of a drug at site-of-action (avoid side effects,
minimize costs, minimize dose, and increase t1/2).

Drug targeting = how do we accumulate drugs at a target site

Drug delivery = how do we get the drug at the site

- Minimal design
- No toxicity
- Elimination of vehicle (secretion vs break-down)
- Compatibility with drug to be targeted (hydrophobic or hydrophilic)
- Costs
- Stability (therapeutics and storage)

We want the drug to remain undetected from the immune system, but you want it to specifically find
and hit the target.

Nanomedicine consists of a matrix containing the drug (both matrix and drug should be hydrophobic
OR hydrophilic), with a surface modification and a receptor for targeting ligand = all biodegradable




Esther: C with double bonded O, is what you degrade by hydrolysis (biodegradable by metabolism)

, PLGA breaks down in minutes but is adjustable so it breaks down over years (used for prestethic and
slow releasing medicine (like insulin)

Delivery routes

- Peroral = oral
- Pulmonal = lungs
- Ophthalmic = eyes
- Percutane = through skin (don’t need doctor)
- Intravenous = into bloodstream
- Intrathecal = injection in spine (passing blood-brain barrier)

Delivery route dictated which barriers the drugs will encounter. There are 3 barriers: epithelial,
endothelial and plasma membrane. Number and nature of barriers are organ-dependent = important
for exam




There are 3 types of capillary endothelia:

- Continuous: endothelial layer with intercellular clefts. Skeletal muscle contains many
transport vesicles, and BBB contains few vesicles.
- Fenestrated: endothelial layer with fenestrations (60-80 nm). Small proteins can pass.
Present in endocrine glands, intestines, pancreas, and glomeruli.
- Sinusoid: endothelial layer with intercellular gaps (30-40 microns) and an incomplete
basement membrane. Entire cells can pass. Present in the bone marrow, lymph nodes, liver,
and spleen.

A cell is 10-20 microns




- Transcellular transport = transport via endocytosed and exocytosis. Cargo should be
recognized. You can conjugation a drug to a metabolic cargo (e.g. vitamin can be conjugated
to insulin) = conjugation strategy (also used in BBB).
- Paracellular transport = transport between cells. Tight junction proteins can tighten or loosen
via calcium signaling, to let proteins diffuse. Too small for nanomedicines. Small proteins
max.
- Nanomedicine: for non-destructive transport, there is no permeation enhancement without
activation of intracellular processes.
$4.87
Accede al documento completo:

100% de satisfacción garantizada
Inmediatamente disponible después del pago
Tanto en línea como en PDF
No estas atado a nada

Conoce al vendedor

Seller avatar
Los indicadores de reputación están sujetos a la cantidad de artículos vendidos por una tarifa y las reseñas que ha recibido por esos documentos. Hay tres niveles: Bronce, Plata y Oro. Cuanto mayor reputación, más podrás confiar en la calidad del trabajo del vendedor.
daniquelichtenberg Radboud Universiteit Nijmegen
Seguir Necesitas iniciar sesión para seguir a otros usuarios o asignaturas
Vendido
27
Miembro desde
2 año
Número de seguidores
7
Documentos
23
Última venta
2 semanas hace

0.0

0 reseñas

5
0
4
0
3
0
2
0
1
0

Recientemente visto por ti

Por qué los estudiantes eligen Stuvia

Creado por compañeros estudiantes, verificado por reseñas

Calidad en la que puedes confiar: escrito por estudiantes que aprobaron y evaluado por otros que han usado estos resúmenes.

¿No estás satisfecho? Elige otro documento

¡No te preocupes! Puedes elegir directamente otro documento que se ajuste mejor a lo que buscas.

Paga como quieras, empieza a estudiar al instante

Sin suscripción, sin compromisos. Paga como estés acostumbrado con tarjeta de crédito y descarga tu documento PDF inmediatamente.

Student with book image

“Comprado, descargado y aprobado. Así de fácil puede ser.”

Alisha Student

Preguntas frecuentes