| Literature DB >> 22833969 |
Finnian Hanrahan1, Peter Humphries, Matthew Campbell.
Abstract
Efficient drug delivery to the brain or the eye remains a key challenge for future therapies directed against neurodegenerative disorders. Indeed it has been estimated that up to 98% of clinically relevant drugs will not diffuse across the endothelial cells associated with the delicate microvasculature of the brain and inner retina. Using RNAi-based methods for suppression of claudin-5, a molecular constituent of the tight junctions associated with both the blood-brain and inner blood-retina barriers, it has been shown that these barriers can be rendered transiently and size-selectively permeable to molecules up to approximately I kDa. This review will discuss the principles upon which this technology is based and the potential therapeutic applications with regard to neurodegenerative disorders as well as common retinopathies.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 22833969 DOI: 10.4155/tde.10.49
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ther Deliv ISSN: 2041-5990