Drug Permeability: From the Blood–Brain Barrier to the Peripheral Nerve Barriers

Author:

Sun Yifei1,Zabihi Mahmood1,Li Qi1,Li Xiaosi1,Kim Brandon J.2345,Ubogu Eroboghene E.6,Raja Srinivasa N.7,Wesselmann Ursula89,Zhao Chao145ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering The University of Alabama Tuscaloosa AL 35487 USA

2. Department of Biological Sciences The University of Alabama Tuscaloosa AL 35487 USA

3. Department of Microbiology Heersink School of Medicine University of Alabama at Birmingham Birmingham AL 35294 USA

4. Center for Convergent Biosciences and Medicine University of Alabama Tuscaloosa AL 35487 USA

5. Alabama Life Research Institute University of Alabama Tuscaloosa AL 35487 USA

6. Division of Neuromuscular Disease Department of Neurology Heersink School of Medicine University of Alabama at Birmingham Birmingham AL 35294 USA

7. Division of Pain Medicine Department of Anesthesiology & Critical Care Medicine Johns Hopkins University Baltimore MD 21287 USA

8. Department of Anesthesiology and Perioperative Medicine Division of Pain Medicine and Department of Neurology Heersink School of Medicine The University of Alabama at Birmingham Birmingham AL 35294 USA

9. Consortium for Neuroengineering and Brain‐Computer Interfaces Heersink School of Medicine The University of Alabama at Birmingham Birmingham AL 35294 USA

Abstract

AbstractDrug delivery into the peripheral nerves and nerve roots has important implications for effective local anesthesia and treatment of peripheral neuropathies and chronic neuropathic pain. Similar to drugs that need to cross the blood–brain barrier (BBB) and blood–spinal cord barrier to gain access to the central nervous system (CNS), drugs must cross the peripheral nerve barriers (PNBs), formed by the perineurium and blood–nerve barrier to modulate peripheral axons. Despite significant progress made to develop effective strategies to enhance BBB permeability in therapeutic drug design, efforts to enhance drug permeability and retention in peripheral nerves and nerve roots are relatively understudied. Guided by knowledge describing structural, molecular, and functional similarities between restrictive neural barriers in the CNS and peripheral nervous system, it is hypothesized that certain CNS drug delivery strategies are adaptable for peripheral nerve drug delivery. Here, the molecular, structural, and functional similarities and differences between the BBB and PNB are described, existing CNS and peripheral nerve drug delivery strategies are summarized and compared, and the potential application of selected CNS delivery strategies to improve efficacious drug entry for peripheral nerve disorders is discussed.

Funder

Breast Cancer Research Foundation of Alabama

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Pharmacology (medical),Biochemistry (medical),Genetics (clinical),Pharmaceutical Science,Pharmacology,Medicine (miscellaneous)

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