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tacrolimus

Modality
small molecule
Mechanism
Mechanism of Action The mechanism of action of tacrolimus in atopic dermatitis is not known. While the following have been observed, the clinical significance of these observations in atopic dermatitis is not known. It has been demonstrated that tacrolimus inhibits T-lymphocyte activation by first binding to an intracellular protein, FKBP-12. A complex of tacrolimus-FKBP-12, calcium, calmodulin, and calcineurin is then formed and the phosphatase activity of calcineurin is inhibited. This effect has been shown to prevent the dephosphorylation and translocation of nuclear factor of activated T-cells (NF-AT), a nuclear component thought to initiate gene transcription for the formation of lymphokines (such as interleukin-2, gamma interferon). Tacrolimus also inhibits the transcription for genes which encode IL-3, IL-4, IL-5, GM-CSF, and TNF-α, all of which are involved in the early stages of T-cell activation. Additionally, tacrolimus has been shown to inhibit the release of pre-formed mediators from skin mast cells and basophils, and to down regulate the expression of FcεRI on Langerhans cells.
Targets
Calcineurin
Storage
Approved
atopic dermatitis — FDA
In trial
seborrheic dermatitis, psoriasis, atopic dermatitis, vitiligo
Sources
Last verified
2026-04-23
No curated MOA diagram yet. See lib/moa-data.ts for the shape; add an entry keyed by tacrolimus.

Formulations

0.03% ointment (≥2 y)0.1% ointment (≥16 y)