A Novel Lysosome Targeting Chimera for Targeted Protein Degradation via Split-and-Mix Strategy.
Jinpeng WangYuechen WangFenfang YangQinhong LuoZhanfeng HouYun XingFei LuZigang LiFeng YinPublished in: ACS chemical biology (2024)
Targeted protein degradation is becoming more and more important in the field of drug development. Compared with proteasomal-based degraders, lysosomal-based degraders have a broader target spectrum of targets, which have been demonstrated to have great potential, especially in degrading undruggable proteins. Recently, we developed a programmable and facile screening PROTAC development platform based on peptide self-assembly termed split-and-mix PROTAC (SM-PROTAC). In this study, we applied this technology for the development of lysosome-based degraders, named a split-and-mix chaperone-mediated autophagy-based degrader (SM-CMAD). We successfully demonstrated SM-CMAD as a universal platform by degrading several targets, including ERα, AR, MEK1/2, and BCR-ABL. Different from other lysosomal-based degraders, SM-CMAD was capable of facile screening with programmable ligand ratios. We believe that our work will promote the development of other multifunctional molecules and clinical translation for lysosomal-based degraders.
Keyphrases
- cancer therapy
- tyrosine kinase
- drug delivery
- high throughput
- cell death
- quantum dots
- protein protein
- signaling pathway
- chronic myeloid leukemia
- binding protein
- endoplasmic reticulum
- gold nanoparticles
- small molecule
- amino acid
- risk assessment
- cell proliferation
- human health
- single cell
- pi k akt
- heat shock
- breast cancer cells