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      Natural and Synthetic Polymers as Inhibitors of Drug Efflux Pumps

      review-article
      Pharmaceutical Research
      Springer US
      drug delivery, efflux pump inhibitors, P-glycoprotein, P-gp inhibitors, polymeric inhibitors

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          Abstract

          Inhibition of efflux pumps is an emerging approach in cancer therapy and drug delivery. Since it has been discovered that polymeric pharmaceutical excipients such as Tweens® or Pluronics® can inhibit efflux pumps, various other polymers have been investigated regarding their potential efflux pump inhibitory activity. Among them are polysaccharides, polyethylene glycols and derivatives, amphiphilic block copolymers, dendrimers and thiolated polymers. In the current review article, natural and synthetic polymers that are capable of inhibiting efflux pumps as well as their application in cancer therapy and drug delivery are discussed.

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          Most cited references93

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          Dendrimers and dendritic polymers in drug delivery.

          The unique properties of dendrimers, such as their high degree of branching, multivalency, globular architecture and well-defined molecular weight, make them promising new scaffolds for drug delivery. In the past decade, research has increased on the design and synthesis of biocompatible dendrimers and their application to many areas of bioscience including drug delivery, immunology and the development of vaccines, antimicrobials and antivirals. Recent progress has been made in the application of biocompatible dendrimers to cancer treatment, including their use as delivery systems for potent anticancer drugs such as cisplatin and doxorubicin, as well as agents for both boron neutron capture therapy and photodynamic therapy.
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            A surface glycoprotein modulating drug permeability in Chinese hamster ovary cell mutants.

            Chinese hamster ovary cells selected for resistance to colchicine display pleiotropic cross-resistance to a wide range of amphiphilic drugs. The drug-resistant phenotype is due to a membrane alteration which reduces the rate of drug permeation. Surface labelling studies reveal that drug-resistant Chinese hamster ovary cell membranes possess a carbohydrate-containing component of 170 000 daltons apparent molecular weight which is not observed in wild type cells. Through studies of the metabolic incorporation of carbohydrate and protein precursors, and through the use of selective proteolysis, this component is shown to be a cell surface glycoprotein. Since this glycoprotein appears unique to mutant cells displaying altered drug permeability, we have designated it the P glycoprotein. The relative amount of surface labelled P glycoprotein correlates with the degree of drug resistance in a number of independent mutant and revertant clones. A similar high molecular weight glycoprotein is also present in drug-resistant mutants from another hamster cell line. Observations on the molecular basis of pleiotropic drug resistance are interpreted in terms of a model wherein certain surface glycoproteins control drug permeation by modulating the properties of hydrophobic membrane regions...
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              Dendrimers in gene delivery.

              Dendrimers have unique molecular architectures and properties that make them attractive materials for the development of nanomedicines. Key properties such as defined architecture and a high ratio of multivalent surface moieties to molecular volume also make these nanoscaled materials highly interesting for the development of synthetic (non-viral) vectors for therapeutic nucleic acids. Rational development of such vectors requires the link to be made between dendrimer structure and the morphology and physicochemistry of the respective nucleic acid complexes and, furthermore, to the biological performance of these systems at the cellular and systemic level. The review focuses on the current understanding of the role of dendrimers in those aspects of synthetic vector development. Dendrimer-based transfection agents have become routine tools for many molecular and cell biologists but therapeutic delivery of nucleic acids remains a challenge.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                martin.werle@uibk.ac.at
                Journal
                Pharm Res
                Pharmaceutical Research
                Springer US (Boston )
                0724-8741
                1573-904X
                26 September 2007
                March 2008
                : 25
                : 3
                : 500-511
                Affiliations
                Department of Pharmaceutical Technology, Leopold-Franzens University Innsbruck, Innrain 52, 6020 Innsbruck, Austria
                Article
                9347
                10.1007/s11095-007-9347-8
                2265773
                17896100
                341daf0c-3d68-4a8a-8c2b-edea2e5c554f
                © Springer Science+Business Media, LLC 2007
                History
                : 4 April 2007
                : 14 May 2007
                Categories
                Expert Review
                Custom metadata
                © Springer Science+Business Media, LLC 2008

                Pharmacology & Pharmaceutical medicine
                polymeric inhibitors,p-gp inhibitors,drug delivery,efflux pump inhibitors,p-glycoprotein

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