Human neutrophil elastase (HNE) is a central mediator of neutrophil-driven inflammation. Yet, despite decades of research and drug development, therapies targeting HNE have not consistently translated into clear clinical benefits. We suggest that this translational gap partly arises from how HNE has traditionally been conceptualized, as a single enzyme to inhibit. In biological systems, however, HNE operates within a complex and tightly regulated network of proteases and inflammatory mediators. This network is spatially compartmentalized and strongly influenced by local redox conditions, making HNE activity highly context-dependent. From a systems perspective, HNE acts as an amplifier of inflammation. Its extracellular activity connects several pathological processes, including activation of innate immunity, extracellular matrix degradation, disruption of epithelial and endothelial barriers, and the transition toward chronic inflammation. In this review, we integrate insights from enzymology, systems biology, and clinical research to reassess the development of HNE inhibitors, ranging from endogenous antiproteases to more recent reversible synthetic compounds. Despite their chemical and pharmacological diversity, many of these strategies have encountered similar limitations. We therefore argue that future therapeutic approaches should move beyond the inhibition of HNE as an isolated target and instead aim to modulate the broader protease network, with particular attention to drug–target kinetics and precise delivery to disease-relevant microenvironments.

Human Neutrophil Elastase and the Protein-Storm Axis: Reversible Synthetic Inhibitors in Inflammatory Disease

Viglio, Simona;Gregorini, Marilena;Rampino, Teresa;Pietrocola, Giampiero;Iadarola, Paolo
2026-01-01

Abstract

Human neutrophil elastase (HNE) is a central mediator of neutrophil-driven inflammation. Yet, despite decades of research and drug development, therapies targeting HNE have not consistently translated into clear clinical benefits. We suggest that this translational gap partly arises from how HNE has traditionally been conceptualized, as a single enzyme to inhibit. In biological systems, however, HNE operates within a complex and tightly regulated network of proteases and inflammatory mediators. This network is spatially compartmentalized and strongly influenced by local redox conditions, making HNE activity highly context-dependent. From a systems perspective, HNE acts as an amplifier of inflammation. Its extracellular activity connects several pathological processes, including activation of innate immunity, extracellular matrix degradation, disruption of epithelial and endothelial barriers, and the transition toward chronic inflammation. In this review, we integrate insights from enzymology, systems biology, and clinical research to reassess the development of HNE inhibitors, ranging from endogenous antiproteases to more recent reversible synthetic compounds. Despite their chemical and pharmacological diversity, many of these strategies have encountered similar limitations. We therefore argue that future therapeutic approaches should move beyond the inhibition of HNE as an isolated target and instead aim to modulate the broader protease network, with particular attention to drug–target kinetics and precise delivery to disease-relevant microenvironments.
2026
Pharmacology & Toxicology includes all aspects of pharmacology, toxicology, and pharmaceutics. Of particular importance are cellular and molecular pharmacology, drug design and metabolism, mechanisms of drug action, drug delivery, natural products, xenobiotics, and clinical therapeutics. Toxicology coverage considers cellular and molecular effects of harmful substances, environmental toxicology, occupational exposure, and clinical toxicology. Drug bulletins, drug updates, and pharmaceutical newsletters are excluded as are resources on pharmaceutical engineering. Medicinal chemistry, or synthesis and chemical analysis of pharmaceuticals are placed in the Chemistry & Analysis category.
Esperti anonimi
Inglese
Internazionale
ELETTRONICO
31
ARDS; COPD; HNE inhibitors; drug discovery; human neutrophil elastase; neutrophilic inflammation; protease–antiprotease imbalance
no
6
263
Viglio, Simona; Grignano, Maria Antonietta; Gregorini, Marilena; Rampino, Teresa; Pietrocola, Giampiero; Iadarola, Paolo
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
1 Contributo su Rivista::1.2 Recensione in rivista
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11571/1550035
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