Drugs need to permeate cell membranes to reach their target sites after administration. Orally administered drugs must transcend intestinal epithelial membrane barriers to infiltrate the systemic circulation. Drugs with a molecular weight of less than 500 Daltons diffuse through gaps between neighboring cells, called paracellular pathways.

However, most drugs use the transcellular route, traversing directly through the cell membranes via two mechanisms: passive and active transport. Passive transport permits drug molecules to move freely through the lipid bilayer along the concentration gradient without energy expenditure.

Active transport allows cells to move drugs against an electrochemical gradient. In primary active transport, membrane transporters utilize ATP to move drugs against the concentration gradient. Drugs are sometimes swapped for other solutes moving along their gradient via symport or antiport mechanisms. Such a process is called secondary active transport.

Lastly, vesicular transport is a method where the cell membrane invaginates to internalize large macromolecules or hydrophilic particles. This process encompasses phagocytosis (cell eating), the engulfment of large foreign particles or macromolecules, and pinocytosis (cell drinking), the internalization of fluids bearing small particles. These processes illustrate the complex and diverse ways drugs can navigate cellular barriers to reach their target sites.

From Chapter 3:

article

Now Playing

3.8 : Mechanisms of Drug Absorption: Paracellular, Transcellular, and Vesicular Transport

Pharmacokinetics: Drug Absorption

184 Views

article

3.1 : Drug Administration and Therapy Phases: Overview

Pharmacokinetics: Drug Absorption

189 Views

article

3.2 : Drug Absorption: Overview

Pharmacokinetics: Drug Absorption

274 Views

article

3.3 : Drug Delivery: Overview

Pharmacokinetics: Drug Absorption

154 Views

article

3.4 : Drug Delivery: Enteral Route

Pharmacokinetics: Drug Absorption

146 Views

article

3.5 : Drug Delivery: Parenteral Route

Pharmacokinetics: Drug Absorption

113 Views

article

3.6 : Drug Delivery: Miscellaneous Routes

Pharmacokinetics: Drug Absorption

110 Views

article

3.7 : Cellular Membranes and Drug Transport

Pharmacokinetics: Drug Absorption

112 Views

article

3.9 : Passive Diffusion: Overview and Kinetics

Pharmacokinetics: Drug Absorption

140 Views

article

3.10 : Pore Transport and Ion-Pair Transport

Pharmacokinetics: Drug Absorption

205 Views

article

3.11 : Carrier-Mediated Transport

Pharmacokinetics: Drug Absorption

125 Views

article

3.12 : Facilitated Diffusion

Pharmacokinetics: Drug Absorption

146 Views

article

3.13 : Active Transport

Pharmacokinetics: Drug Absorption

208 Views

article

3.14 : Vesicular Trasport: Endocytosis, Transcytosis and Exocytosis

Pharmacokinetics: Drug Absorption

331 Views

article

3.15 : Factors Influencing Drug Absorption: Anatomical Parameters

Pharmacokinetics: Drug Absorption

104 Views

See More

JoVE Logo

Privacy

Terms of Use

Policies

Research

Education

ABOUT JoVE

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. All rights reserved