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Intrinsic signaling pathways modulate targeted protein degradation.

Yuki MoriYoshino AkizukiRikuto HondaMiyu TakaoAyaka TsuchimotoSota HashimotoHiroaki IioMasakazu KatoAi Kaiho-SomaYasushi SaekiJun HamazakiShigeo MurataToshikazu UshijimaNaoko HattoriFumiaki Ohtake
Published in: Nature communications (2024)
Targeted protein degradation is a groundbreaking modality in drug discovery; however, the regulatory mechanisms are still not fully understood. Here, we identify cellular signaling pathways that modulate the targeted degradation of the anticancer target BRD4 and related neosubstrates BRD2/3 and CDK9 induced by CRL2 VHL - or CRL4 CRBN -based PROTACs. The chemicals identified as degradation enhancers include inhibitors of cellular signaling pathways such as poly-ADP ribosylation (PARG inhibitor PDD00017273), unfolded protein response (PERK inhibitor GSK2606414), and protein stabilization (HSP90 inhibitor luminespib). Mechanistically, PARG inhibition promotes TRIP12-mediated K29/K48-linked branched ubiquitylation of BRD4 by facilitating chromatin dissociation of BRD4 and formation of the BRD4-PROTAC-CRL2 VHL ternary complex; by contrast, HSP90 inhibition promotes BRD4 degradation after the ubiquitylation step. Consequently, these signal inhibitors sensitize cells to the PROTAC-induced apoptosis. These results suggest that various cell-intrinsic signaling pathways spontaneously counteract chemically induced target degradation at multiple steps, which could be liberated by specific inhibitors.
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