Targeted degradation approaches have recently generated much excitement as a paradigm shift to address human disease in unprecedented ways. Amongst these, small molecule based approaches such as Proteolysis targeting chimeras (PROTACs) have attracted the lion’s share of attention due to their potential to tackle historically intractable targets and achieve greater potency, efficacy, and specificity over traditional small molecule inhibitors. Despite their promise, the identification of high-affinity ligands that can serve as starting points for PROTAC strategies remains challenging. As a complementary approach, we describe herein a class of intracellular biologics termed bioPROTACs. The substrate binding component of these fusion proteins consists of a peptide or an antibody-mimetic which allows for an unprecedented diversity of protein targets that can be addressed. The high-affinity binder is linked directly to an E3 ubiquitin ligase to harness the power of targeted degradation. Using GFP-tagged proteins as model substrates, we show that there is considerable flexibility in both the choice of substrate binders (binding positions, scaffold-class) and the E3 ligases. Indeed, 9 out of 16 binder-E3 combinations tested resulted in greater than 70% target clearance. Through a systematic approach, we then identified a highly effective bioPROTAC against an oncology target, proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA), a sliding DNA clamp with critical roles in DNA replication and repair. The bioPROTAC, termed Con1-SPOP, elicited rapid and robust PCNA degradation and associated effects on DNA synthesis and cell cycle progression. Compared to RNAi-based approaches which typically take days to manifest, PCNA knockdown using Con1-SPOP was evident within 4 h. The advantage of degradation versus stoichiometric inhibition was also clearly demonstrated with bioPROTAC strategies. Combining superior pharmacological inhibition and relative ease of development, bioPROTACs are powerful tools for interrogating the degradability of a substrate, for guiding the identification of the fittest E3 ligase, for studying the functional consequences associated with target protein down-regulation, and potentially for making therapeutic impacts.
bioPROTACs as versatile modulators of intracellular therapeutic targets: Application to proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA)
Shuhui Lim,R. Khoo,Khong Ming Peh,Jinkai Teo,S. Chang,Simon Ng,Greg L. Beilhartz,R. Melnyk,C. Johannes,C. Brown,D. Lane,Brian Henry,A. Partridge
Published 2019 in bioRxiv
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- Publication year
2019
- Venue
bioRxiv
- Publication date
2019-08-07
- Fields of study
Biology, Medicine, Chemistry
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