作者
Martin Schröder,Martin Renatus,Xiaonan Liang,Fabian Meili,Sandrine Ferrand,François Gauter,Xiaoyan Li,Fred Sigoillot,Scott Gleim,Marie-Therese Stachyra,Jason R. Thomas,Markus Schirle,Thomas Zöller,Damien Bégué,Peggy Lefeuvre,BoYee Chung,Renate Ma,Seth Carbonneau,Benika J. Pinch,Niko Schmiedeberg,Patricia Imbach,Andreas Hofmann,Rita Rey,Delphine Gorses,Keith Calkins,Bea Bauer-Probst,Magdalena Maschlej,Matt Niederst,Rob Maher,Martin Hénault,John Alford,Erik Ahrné,Greg Hollingworth,Nicolas H. Thomä,Anna Vulpetti,Thomas Radimerski,Philipp Holzer,Claudio R. Thoma
摘要
ABSTRACT Targeted protein degradation (TPD) of neo-substrates with proteolysis targeting chimeras (PROTACs) or molecular glues has emerged as a key modality in exploring new biology as well as designing new drug candidates where catalytic inhibition is neither efficacious nor an option. TPD is mediated through harnessing E3 ligases and redirecting them to ubiquitinate de novo target proteins for subsequent proteasomal degradation. Until recently, E3 ligase chemical matter available for mediating TPD has been limited to a relatively low number of ligases, considering that over 600 E3 ligases are encoded by the human genome. In addition, the most utilized ligase for TPD approaches, CRBN, has been observed to be downregulated in settings of acquired resistance to immunomodulatory inhibitory drugs (IMiDs). IMiDs are molecular glues that target IKZF transcription factors to CRBN for degradation. Resistance is potentially accelerated by non-essentiality of CRBN for cell viability. Here we investigated if the essential E3 ligase receptor DCAF1 can be harnessed for TPD utilizing a potent, non-covalent DCAF1 binder. We show that this binder, selective for the CRL4 DCAF1 E3 ligase complex, can be functionalized into an efficient DCAF1-BRD9 PROTAC. Chemical and genetic rescue experiments confirm specific degradation via the CRL4 DCAF1 E3 ligase. We further highlight the versatility of DCAF1 for TPD by developing a DCAF1-dasatininb PROTAC targeting multiple cytosolic and membrane bound tyrosine kinases. We expand these findings towards Bruton’s tyrosine kinase (BTK) selective PROTACs and through extensive optimization and characterization efforts share key observations that led to a potent and selective DCAF1-BTK PROTAC (DBt-10). Finally, with this PROTAC DBt-10, we show rescue of BTK degradation in a BTK-dependent, CRBN-degradation-resistant cell line and provide a rationale for E3 ligase swap to overcome CRBN mediated resistance.