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Progress and limitations in the use of in vitro cell cultures to serve as a permeability screen for the blood-brain barrier

✍ Scribed by Mark Gumbleton; Kenneth L. Audus


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2001
Tongue
English
Weight
200 KB
Volume
90
Category
Article
ISSN
0022-3549

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✦ Synopsis


A relatively simple, widely applicable, and robust in vitro method of predicting blood-brain barrier (BBB) permeability to central nervous system-acting drugs is an increasing need. A cell-based model offers the potential to account for transcellular and paracellular drug diffusional processes, metabolism, and active transport processes, as well as nonde®ned interactions between a drug and cellular material that may impact upon a membrane's overall permeability pro®le. Any in vitro BBB cell model to be utilized for the transendothelial BBB permeability screening of potential central nervous system drugs must display reproducible solute permeability, and a number of other general criteria including: a restrictive paracellular barrier; a physiologically realistic cell architecture; the functional expression of key transporter mechanisms; and allow ease of culture to meet the technical and time constraints of a screening program. This article reviews the range of in vitro cell-based BBB models available, including the primary/low passage bovine and porcine brain endothelial cultures as well as the spectrum of immortalized brain endothelial cell lines that have been established. The article further discusses the bene®ts and limitations of exploiting such systems as in vitro BBB permeability screens.


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