Content area

Abstract

Current intra-articular drug delivery methods do not guarantee sufficient drug penetration into cartilage tissue to reach cell and matrix targets at the concentrations necessary to elicit the desired biological response. Here, we provide our perspective on the utilization of charge-charge (electrostatic) interactions to enhance drug penetration and transport into cartilage, and to enable sustained binding of drugs within the tissue's highly negatively charged extracellular matrix. By coupling drugs to positively charged nanocarriers that have optimal size and charge, cartilage can be converted from a drug barrier into a drug reservoir for sustained intra-tissue delivery. Alternatively, a wide variety of drugs themselves can be made cartilage-penetrating by functionalizing them with specialized positively charged protein domains. Finally, we emphasize that appropriate animal models, with cartilage thickness similar to that of humans, must be used for the study of drug transport and retention in cartilage.

Details

Title
Cartilage-targeting drug delivery: can electrostatic interactions help?
Author
Bajpayee, Ambika G; Grodzinsky, Alan J
Pages
183-193
Publication year
2017
Publication date
Mar 2017
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
ISSN
17594790
e-ISSN
17594804
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1891859190
Copyright
Copyright Nature Publishing Group Mar 2017