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A TRPA1 inhibitor suppresses neurogenic inflammation and airway contraction for asthma treatment

Authors :
Jun Chen
Justin Elstrott
Lan Wang
Simon S. Gao
Richard A.D. Carano
Jose E. Heredia
Elisia Villemure
Daniel G. Shore
Wyne P. Lee
Bobby Brillantes
Joseph H. Lin
Liling Liu
David H. Hackos
Jens Kortmann
Matthew Volgraf
Daniel D. Bravo
Christine Tam
Lorena Riol-Blanco
Steven Magnuson
Lionel Rouge
Chris Bjornson
Baihua Hu
Tania Chernov-Rogan
Rebecca M. Reese
Christopher P. Arthur
Min Jung
Michelle Dourado
Xiumin Wu
Victory Joseph
Alberto Estevez
John Liu
Alvin Gogineni
Juan Zhang
Laurie Leong
Jian Payandeh
Vishal Verma
Shannon D. Shields
Han Ting Ding
Brian Safina
Alessia Balestrini
Yong Chen
Vineela D. Gandham
Eric Suto
Jianyong Wang
Justin Ly
Rebecca N. Bauer
Jonas Doerr
Alexis Rohou
Cary D. Austin
Jason A. Vander Heiden
Xiaoying Yang
Ryan L. Wong
Lucinda Tam
Liuxi Chen
Kathy Hötzel
Kai H. Barck
Merone Roose-Girma
Claudio Ciferri
Huifen Chen
Bianca M. Liederer
Source :
Journal of Experimental Medicine. 218
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Rockefeller University Press, 2021.

Abstract

Despite the development of effective therapies, a substantial proportion of asthmatics continue to have uncontrolled symptoms, airflow limitation, and exacerbations. Transient receptor potential cation channel member A1 (TRPA1) agonists are elevated in human asthmatic airways, and in rodents, TRPA1 is involved in the induction of airway inflammation and hyperreactivity. Here, the discovery and early clinical development of GDC-0334, a highly potent, selective, and orally bioavailable TRPA1 antagonist, is described. GDC-0334 inhibited TRPA1 function on airway smooth muscle and sensory neurons, decreasing edema, dermal blood flow (DBF), cough, and allergic airway inflammation in several preclinical species. In a healthy volunteer Phase 1 study, treatment with GDC-0334 reduced TRPA1 agonist-induced DBF, pain, and itch, demonstrating GDC-0334 target engagement in humans. These data provide therapeutic rationale for evaluating TRPA1 inhibition as a clinical therapy for asthma.

Details

ISSN :
15409538 and 00221007
Volume :
218
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Experimental Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........7586a7b163f0274f73ff2d6634f422f1
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1084/jem.20201637