泛素连接酶
泛素
融合蛋白
沙利度胺
转录因子
锌指
蛋白质降解
癌症研究
蛋白酶体
化学
生物
细胞生物学
多发性骨髓瘤
生物化学
免疫学
基因
重组DNA
作者
Aline Renneville,Jessica A. Gasser,Daniel E. Grinshpun,Pierre M. Jean Beltran,Namrata D. Udeshi,Mary E. Matyskiela,Thomas Clayton,Marie McConkey,Kaushik Viswanathan,Alexander Tepper,Andrew A. Guirguis,Rob S. Sellar,Sophie Cotteret,Christophe Marzac,Véronique Saada,Stéphane de Botton,Jean‐Jacques Kiladjian,Jean‐Michel Cayuela,Mark Rolfe,Philip P. Chamberlain
出处
期刊:Blood cancer discovery
[American Association for Cancer Research]
日期:2021-03-10
卷期号:2 (3): 250-265
被引量:41
标识
DOI:10.1158/2643-3230.bcd-20-0105
摘要
Abstract Thalidomide analogues exert their therapeutic effects by binding to the CRL4CRBN E3 ubiquitin ligase, promoting ubiquitination and subsequent proteasomal degradation of specific protein substrates. Drug-induced degradation of IKZF1 and IKZF3 in B-cell malignancies demonstrates the clinical utility of targeting disease-relevant transcription factors for degradation. Here, we found that avadomide (CC-122) induces CRBN-dependent ubiquitination and proteasomal degradation of ZMYM2 (ZNF198), a transcription factor involved in balanced chromosomal rearrangements with FGFR1 and FLT3 in aggressive forms of hematologic malignancies. The minimal drug-responsive element of ZMYM2 is a zinc-chelating MYM domain and is contained in the N-terminal portion of ZMYM2 that is universally included in the derived fusion proteins. We demonstrate that avadomide has the ability to induce proteasomal degradation of ZMYM2–FGFR1 and ZMYM2–FLT3 chimeric oncoproteins, both in vitro and in vivo. Our findings suggest that patients with hematologic malignancies harboring these ZMYM2 fusion proteins may benefit from avadomide treatment. Significance: We extend the potential clinical scope of thalidomide analogues by the identification of a novel avadomide-dependent CRL4CRBN substrate, ZMYM2. Avadomide induces ubiquitination and degradation of ZMYM2–FGFR1 and ZMYM2–FLT3, two chimeric oncoproteins involved in hematologic malignancies, providing a proof of concept for drug-induced degradation of transcription factor fusion proteins by thalidomide analogues.
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