We use cookies to help provide you with the best possible online experience. Please read our Privacy Policy for information about which cookies we use and what information we collect on our site. By continuing to use this site, you agree that we may store and access cookies on your device.
One More Step to Finalize Your Registration
An activation link has been sent to your email address.
Please check the email and activate your account now. It might take few minutes to get the email.
If you did not find it, please check your spam box.
Having problem receiving the email? Send again
Still cannot receive? Contact us
Email :PharmaSources@imsinoexpo.com
Whatsapp :+86-13621645194
Main Sales Markets: North America,Central/South America,Western Europe,Eastern Europe,Asia,Middle East,Africa
Contract Manufacturing: CRO,CMO
Sample Provided: yes
Immunosuppressive Product Pimecrolimus
Specification:
Unlike the similarly named tacrolimus, sirolimus is not a calcineurin inhibitor, but it has a similar suppressive effect on the immune system. Sirolimus inhibits the response to interleukin-2 (IL-2), and thereby blocks activation of T and B cells. In contrast, tacrolimus inhibits the secretion of IL-2.
The mode of action of sirolimus is to bind the cytosolic protein FK-binding protein 12 (FKBP12) in a manner similar to tacrolimus. Unlike the tacrolimus-FKBP12 complex which inhibits calcineurin (PP2B), the sirolimus-FKBP12 complex inhibits the mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR, rapamycin being an older name for sirolimus) pathway by directly binding the mTOR Complex1 (mTORC1).
mTOR has also been called FRAP (FKBP-rapamycin associated protein), RAFT (rapamycin and FKBP target), RAPT1, or SEP. The earlier names FRAP and RAFT were coined to reflect the fact that sirolimus must bind FKBP12 first, and only the FKBP12-sirolimus complex can bind mTOR. However, mTOR is now the widely accepted name, since Tor was first discovered via genetic and molecular studies of sirolimus-resistant mutants of Saccharomyces cerevisiaethat identified FKBP12, Tor1, and Tor2 as the targets of sirolimus and provided robust support that the FKBP12-sirolimus complex binds to and inhibits Tor1 and Tor2.