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Targeting Syk as a treatment for allergic and autoimmune disorders
- Source :
- Expert Opinion on Investigational Drugs. 13:743-762
- Publication Year :
- 2004
- Publisher :
- Informa UK Limited, 2004.
-
Abstract
- Recent advances in our understanding of allergic and autoimmune disorders have begun to translate into novel, effective and safe medicines for these common maladies. Examples include an anti-IgE monoclonal antibody recently approved for severe asthmatics and the TNF-alpha antagonists that have demonstrated their ability to suppress rheumatoid arthritis, Crohn's disease and other chronic inflammatory processes. However, protein therapies are difficult and expensive to develop, manufacture and administer. Clearly, there is also a need for small-molecule inhibitors of novel targets that have safe and effective characteristics. Syk is an intracellular protein tyrosine kinase that was discovered 15 years ago as a key mediator of immunoreceptor signalling in a host of inflammatory cells including B cells, mast cells, macrophages and neutrophils. These immunoreceptors, including Fc receptors and the B-cell receptor, are important for both allergic diseases and antibody-mediated autoimmune diseases and thus pharmacologically interfering with Syk could conceivably treat these disorders. In addition, as Syk is positioned upstream in the cell signalling pathway, therapies targeting Syk may be more advantageous relative to drugs that inhibit a single downstream event. Syk inhibition during an allergic or asthmatic response will block three mast cell functions: the release of preformed mediators such as histamine, the production of lipid mediators such as leukotrienes and prostaglandins and the secretion of cytokines. In contrast, commonly used antihistamines or leukotriene receptor antagonists target only a single mediator of this complex cascade. Despite its expression in platelets and other non-haematopoietic cells, the role of Syk in regulating vascular homeostasis and other housekeeping functions is minimal or masked by redundant Syk-independent pathways. This suggests that targeting Syk would be an optimal approach to effectively treat a multitude of chronic inflammatory diseases without undue toxicity.
- Subjects :
- Syk
Inflammation
Immunoglobulin E
Fostamatinib
Autoimmune Diseases
LYN
Immunoreceptor tyrosine-based activation motif
Hypersensitivity
Animals
Humans
Syk Kinase
Medicine
Pharmacology (medical)
Pharmacology
Enzyme Precursors
biology
business.industry
Intracellular Signaling Peptides and Proteins
General Medicine
Protein-Tyrosine Kinases
Mast cell
medicine.anatomical_structure
Immunology
biology.protein
medicine.symptom
business
Tyrosine kinase
medicine.drug
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 17447658 and 13543784
- Volume :
- 13
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Expert Opinion on Investigational Drugs
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....2c86b345f1a73e35cb734d15a84ad864
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1517/13543784.13.7.743