CU104, a novel barrier function enhancer, improves colitis via modulation of barrier function and immune cell recruitment
I Seul Park, Ji Hyung Kim, Dongyeop Kim, Ye Won Kim, Yoojin Shin, Ki Beom Kim, Haiying Zhang, Tae Il Kim, Seung Won Kim, Young-Guen Kwon, Jae Hee Cheon

TL;DR
CU104 improves colitis by enhancing intestinal and vascular barriers and reducing immune cell recruitment.
Contribution
CU104 is a novel compound that modulates actin dynamics and inflammatory pathways to treat colitis.
Findings
CU104 suppresses innate immune responses and barrier dysfunction in colitis models.
It inhibits NF-κB and IRF activation and the ERM signaling pathway.
CU104 improves vascular and intestinal barrier functions during inflammation.
Abstract
Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), including Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis, is a chronic and relapsing condition with complex pathogenesis and limited therapeutic options. The efficacy of CU104, a novel blocker of endothelial dysfunction, in IBD models is poorly understood. Moreover, its precise cellular or molecular mechanisms in colitis remain unknown. To evaluate the therapeutic potential of CU104, we tested CU104 in two colitis models: dinitrobenzene sulfonic acid (DNBS)–induced colitis in wild-type mice and dextran sodium sulfate (DSS)–challenged colitis in IL-10 knockout mice. Additionally, we used Caco-2, HCT-116, and HT-29 cells to assess CU104 effects on intestinal barrier function (FITC-dextran permeability and TEER), inflammatory signaling (reporter assays), actin dynamics, and gene expression (gene expression profiling and immune assays). CU104 demonstrated potent…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBarrier Structure and Function Studies · Inflammatory Bowel Disease · Cell Adhesion Molecules Research
