“…NAEs are primarily inactivated by hydrolysis to ethanolamine and fatty acid (8,9) carried out by two enzymes: fatty acid amide hydrolase (FAAH) (10) and N-acylethanolamine acid amidase (NAAA) (9). FAAH is widely distributed (11) although it is most abundant in the brain and liver (12), whereas NAAA is almost exclusively expressed in immune cells (13,14) such as monocytes and tissue macrophages (15,16) but is also found in prostate epithelium (13,17). In light of the analgesic and antiinflammatory actions of PEA, multiple NAAA inhibitors have been developed over the last decade (18,19) and shown to exhibit beneficial effects in a range of rodent models of human disease, including inflammation (20)(21)(22)(23)(24)(25), allergic contact dermatitis (26), spinal cord trauma (27), neuropathic pain (28,29), chronic pain (30), inflammatory bowel disease (31), lung inflammation (25,32), arthritis (14), and multiple sclerosis (33).…”