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Abstract
The need for novel anti-inflammatory drugs justifies the search for innovative targets
that could satisfy this goal. For quite some time now, we have proposed the study
of endogenous anti-inflammation as a distinctive approach to the discovery of new
drugs. This approach requires development of new compounds that activate specific
receptor targets to downregulate the cellular and tissue pathways operative in the
host during inflammation. Here we dwell on a family of G-protein coupled receptors
(GPCR) termed FPRs, acronym for formyl-peptide receptors. With three and seven members
in man and mouse, respectively, these receptors harness many biological functions,
spanning odour perception and hair growth, to the control of multiple facets (pain;
cell migration; oxidative burst; xenobiotic engulfment) of the inflammatory reaction.
We focus on FPR biology with particular attention to molecules able to produce pharmacological
effects by interacting with these GPCRs, describing endogenous agonists of FPRs and,
more relevantly, the current development of synthetic agonists. Besides being potential
leads for the development of the anti-inflammatory therapeutics of the future, these
compounds could also help clarify the properties and roles that each FPR might play
in the complex network of pathways that is inflammation. We conclude that FPR2 agonists
could be valid warhorses for defining a novel philosophy for anti-inflammatory drug
discovery programmes: mimicking - with new compounds - the way our body disposes of
inflammation could be a viable approach to regulate aberrant inflammatory responses
as in the case of several chronic rheumatic and cardiovascular pathologies.
(c) 2010 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.