For many pharmaceutical applications, it is important that different drugs are present in the human body at distinct
timepoints. Typically, this is achieved by a sequential administration of different therapeutic agents. Amuch
easier alternative would be to develop a drug delivery system containing a whole set of medically active compounds
which are liberated in an orchestrated and controlled manner. Yet, such a controlled, sequential release
of drugs from a carrier system that can be used in a physiological situation is difficult to achieve. Here, we combine
two molecular mechanisms, i.e. a build-up of osmotic pressure by the depletion of a control molecule and
triggered disaggregation of nanoparticle clusters by synthetic DNA sequences. With this approach, we gain
spatio-temporal control over the release of molecules and nanoparticles from a gel environment. The strategy
presented here has strong implications for developing complex drug delivery systems for wound healing
applications or for the sustained release of pharmaceuticals from a drug-loaded gel and will lower the need for
multiple drug administrations.
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For many pharmaceutical applications, it is important that different drugs are present in the human body at distinct
timepoints. Typically, this is achieved by a sequential administration of different therapeutic agents. Amuch
easier alternative would be to develop a drug delivery system containing a whole set of medically active compounds
which are liberated in an orchestrated and controlled manner. Yet, such a controlled, sequential release
of drugs from a carrier system that can be used i...
»