70 research outputs found
Controlling inflammation: a fat chance?
The inflammatory response protects the body against infection and injury but can itself become deregulated with deleterious consequences to the host. It is now clear that several endogenous biochemical pathways activated during defense reactions can counterregulate inflammation. New experimental evidence adds resolvin E1 to this group of endogenous inhibitors and provides further rationale for the beneficial effects of dietary supplementation with fish oils. It also highlights an unexpected twist in the pharmacology of aspirin
Resolvin D2 is a potent regulator of leukocytes and controls microbial sepsis
National Institutes of Health grants GM-38765 and P50-DE016191 (C.N.S.), Welcome Trust Programme grant 086867/Z/08/Z (R.J.F. and M.P.) and Project grant 085903/Z/08 (R.J.F.) and Arthritis Research Campaign UK fellowships 18445 and 18103 (to L.V.N. and D.C., respectively). M.S. received a National Research Service Award from the NHLBI (HL087526)
The Anti-allergic Cromones: Past, Present, and Future
The anti-allergic cromones were originally synthesized in the 1960s by Fisons Plc, and the first drug to emerge from this program, disodium cromoglycate was subsequently marketed for the treatment of asthma and other allergic conditions. Whilst early studies demonstrated that the ability of the cromones to prevent allergic reactions was due to their ‘mast cell stabilizing’ properties, the exact pharmacological mechanism by which this occurred, remained a mystery. Here, we briefly review the history of these drugs, recount some aspects of their pharmacology, and discuss two new explanations for their unique actions. We further suggest how these findings could be used to predict further uses for the cromones
An overview of the effects of annexin 1 on cells involved in the inflammatory process
The concept of anti-inflammation is currently evolving with the
definition of several endogenous inhibitory circuits that are important
in the control of the host inflammatory response. Here we focus on one
of these pathways, the annexin 1 (ANXA1) system. Originally identified
as a 37 kDa glucocorticoid-inducible protein, ANXA1 has emerged over
the last decade as an important endogenous modulator of inflammation.
We review the pharmacological effects of ANXA1 on cell types involved
in inflammation, from blood-borne leukocytes to resident cells. This
review reveals that there is scope for more research, since most of the
studies have so far focused on the effects of the protein and its
peptido-mimetics on neutrophil recruitment and activation. However,
many other cells central to inflammation, e.g. endothelial cells or
mast cells, also express ANXA1: it is foreseen that a better definition
of the role(s) of the endogenous protein in these cells will open the
way to further pharmacological studies. We propose that a more
systematic analysis of ANXA1 physio-pharmacology in cells involved in
the host inflammatory reaction could aid in the design of novel
anti-inflammatory therapeutics based on this endogenous mediator
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