Targeted drug delivery 2 Flashcards
Why would you use active targeting to deliver drugs?
If you are not targeting cancer or for TDDs that are too small to accumulate via the EPR effect
What is often upregulated in certain disease states?
Cell surface anitgens
What can be used against antigens to target specifically diseased cells?
Antibodies
What is over expressed in many cancers(especially breast cancer)?
HER2
What is HER2?
A transmembrane glycoprotein
What is ADEPT?
Antibody-directed enzyme prodrug therapy.
An antibody developed against a tumour antigen is linked to an enzyme and injected into the blood, resulting in selective binding of the enzyme in the tumour. When the discrimination between tumour and normal tissue enzyme levels is sufficient, a prodrug is administered into the blood circulation, which is converted to an active cytotoxic drug by the enzyme, only within the tumour.
What 2 molecules are widely used in biology for detection and purification of biomolecules?
Biotin
Avidin
What has biotin been used for?
Clinically to diagnose and treat tumours
What is the luteinising hormone releasing hormone receptor overexpressed in?
Ovarian and some other cancers
What are integrins?
Cell surface glycoproteins that mediate cell-cell and cell-matrix interactions
Ligands that bind to integrins can be used to what?
Specifically target drugs to tumours
Magnetism can be used for what?
Targeting and release of drugs