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Discovery of PVD-06 as a Subtype-Selective and Efficient PTPN2 Degrader.

Linghao HuHuiyun LiJunlin QinDan YangJieming LiuXiaomin LuoJingkun MaCheng LuoFei YeYubo ZhouJia LiMingliang Wang
Published in: Journal of medicinal chemistry (2023)
Protein tyrosine phosphatase nonreceptor Type 2 (PTPN2) is an attractive target for cancer immunotherapy. PTPN2 and another subtype of PTP1B are highly similar in structure, but their biological functions are distinct. Therefore, subtype-selective targeting of PTPN2 remains a challenge for researchers. Herein, the development of small molecular PTPN2 degraders based on a thiadiazolidinone dioxide-naphthalene scaffold and a VHL E3 ligase ligand is described, and the PTPN2/PTP1B subtype-selective degradation is achieved for the first time. The linker structure modifications led to the discovery of the subtype-selective PTPN2 degrader PVD-06 (PTPN2/PTP1B selective index > 60-fold), which also exhibits excellent proteome-wide degradation selectivity. PVD-06 induces PTPN2 degradation in a ubiquitination- and proteasome-dependent manner. It efficiently promotes T cell activation and amplifies IFN-γ-mediated B16F10 cell growth inhibition. This study provides a convenient chemical knockdown tool for PTPN2-related research and a paradigm for subtype-selective PTP degradation through nonspecific substrate-mimicking ligands, demonstrating the therapeutic potential of PTPN2 subtype-selective degradation.
Keyphrases
  • small molecule
  • immune response
  • single molecule
  • cancer therapy
  • binding protein
  • protein protein
  • single cell