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An aptamer-based depot system for sustained release of small molecule therapeutics

Medicine and Health

An aptamer-based depot system for sustained release of small molecule therapeutics

D. Wang, Y. Li, et al.

Explore how DNA aptamers can revolutionize the delivery of hydrophilic small molecule therapeutics! Dali Wang, Yang Li, Xiaoran Deng, and their team have created a sustained-release drug depot system that minimizes systemic toxicity and enhances local anesthetic effects. This innovative approach holds promising potential for effective postoperative pain management.

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~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
Delivery of hydrophilic small molecule therapeutics by traditional systems is challenging. The authors use the specific interaction between DNA aptamers and drugs to create simple, effective depot systems. Phosphorothioate-modified aptamers form non-covalent aptamer/drug complexes enabling sustained release. Using tetrodotoxin (TTX) and saxitoxin (STX) as models, the aptamer-based system greatly prolonged local anesthesia and reduced systemic toxicity. Benefits were restricted to compounds for which the aptamers were specific. These studies establish aptamers as highly specific, modifiable drug delivery systems with potential for postoperative pain management.
Publisher
Nature Communications
Published On
Apr 28, 2023
Authors
Dali Wang, Yang Li, Xiaoran Deng, Matthew Torre, Zipei Zhang, Xiyu Li, Wei Zhang, Kathleen Cullion, Daniel S. Kohane, Christopher B. Weldon
Tags
DNA aptamers
drug delivery
sustained release
local anesthesia
systemic toxicity
postoperative pain
small molecule therapeutics
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