In Vitro Models of the Blood-Cerebrospinal Fluid Barrier and Their Applications in the Development and Research of (Neuro)Pharmaceuticals

Pharmaceutics. 2022 Aug 18;14(8):1729. doi: 10.3390/pharmaceutics14081729.

Abstract

The pharmaceutical research sector has been facing the challenge of neurotherapeutics development and its inherited high-risk and high-failure-rate nature for decades. This hurdle is partly attributable to the presence of brain barriers, considered both as obstacles and opportunities for the entry of drug substances. The blood-cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) barrier (BCSFB), an under-studied brain barrier site compared to the blood-brain barrier (BBB), can be considered a potential therapeutic target to improve the delivery of CNS therapeutics and provide brain protection measures. Therefore, leveraging robust and authentic in vitro models of the BCSFB can diminish the time and effort spent on unproductive or redundant development activities by a preliminary assessment of the desired physiochemical behavior of an agent toward this barrier. To this end, the current review summarizes the efforts and progresses made to this research area with a notable focus on the attribution of these models and applied techniques to the pharmaceutical sector and the development of neuropharmacological therapeutics and diagnostics. A survey of available in vitro models, with their advantages and limitations and cell lines in hand will be provided, followed by highlighting the potential applications of such models in the (neuro)therapeutics discovery and development pipelines.

Keywords: BCSFB; blood–cerebrospinal fluid barrier; choroid plexus; drug permeability; drugs; in vitro model; therapeutics.

Publication types

  • Review

Grants and funding

This work was supported by funding from the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research, BMBF (FKZ: 16GW0325 (BrainAim)). For the APC we acknowledge financial support by Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft within the funding programme “Open Access Publikationskosten” as well as by Heidelberg University.