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A potent MAPK13-14 inhibitor prevents airway inflammation and mucus production. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Common respiratory diseases cause significant public health issues due to airway inflammation and excessive mucus production, driven by certain kinases, particularly MAPK14 and MAPK13.
  • Previous studies showed MAPK13's essential role in mucus production, yet early inhibitor drugs weren't fully optimized or tested in living models.
  • The study introduces NuP-3, a new and more effective inhibitor targeting MAPK13-14, which successfully reduces mucus production and inflammation in human cell cultures and minipig models of airway disease.

Article Abstract

Common respiratory diseases continue to represent a major public health problem, and much of the morbidity and mortality is due to airway inflammation and mucus production. Previous studies indicated a role for mitogen-activated protein kinase 14 (MAPK14) in this type of disease, but clinical trials are unsuccessful to date. Our previous work identified a related but distinct kinase known as MAPK13 that is activated in respiratory airway diseases and is required for mucus production in human cell-culture models. Support for MAPK13 function in these models came from effectiveness of versus gene-knockdown and from first-generation MAPK13-14 inhibitors. However, these first-generation inhibitors were incompletely optimized for blocking activity and were untested in vivo. Here we report the next generation and selection of a potent MAPK13-14 inhibitor (designated NuP-3) that more effectively down-regulates type-2 cytokine-stimulated mucus production in air-liquid interface and organoid cultures of human airway epithelial cells. We also show that NuP-3 treatment prevents respiratory airway inflammation and mucus production in new minipig models of airway disease triggered by type-2 cytokine challenge or respiratory viral infection. The results thereby provide the next advance in developing a small-molecule kinase inhibitor to address key features of respiratory disease.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10246002PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2023.05.26.542451DOI Listing

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