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In recent years there have been rapid advances in the growth and
differentiation of mammalian cells in culture. This has led to
increasing use of such in vitro systems in a wide variety of
studies on fundamental aspects of cell structure and function,
including normal growth and metabolism, mechanisms of
differentiation and oncogenesis, mechanisms of protein and membrane
synthesis and cell polarity. Recent advances in our ability to grow
cells, including human cells, on permeable supports, to generate
confluent cellular barriers with the morphological polarity
corresponding to their in vivo counterparts has greatly facilitated
such studies. In particular these new techniques have led to an
increasing interest in the use of cell and tissue culture systems
as a means for examining the transport of drugs across epithelial
and endothelial barriers. An obvious question is whether these new
in vitro methodologies will provide convenient systems that can
substitute for and replace animal models. Various research groups
both in academia and in the pharmaceutical industry have been
investigating these types of methodologies in order to develop
convenient well characterized systems that can be used to examine
basic aspects of transcellular transport and to evaluate the
permeability of drug molecules and delivery systems. Of particular
note is use of confluent cell layers to study the transport of
large molecules such as peptides and proteins produced through
recombinant DNA technology.
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