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Degradation by Design: New Cyclin K Degraders from Old CDK Inhibitors.

Katie L ThomasHabib BougueninaDaniel S J MillerFernando J SialanaThomas G HayhowJyoti S ChoudharyOlivia W RossaneseBenjamin R Bellenie
Published in: ACS chemical biology (2024)
Small molecules that induce protein degradation hold the potential to overcome several limitations of the currently available inhibitors. Monovalent or molecular glue degraders, in particular, enable the benefits of protein degradation without the disadvantages of high molecular weight and the resulting challenge in drug development that are associated with bivalent molecules like Proteolysis Targeting Chimeras. One key challenge in designing monovalent degraders is how to build in the degrader activity─how can we convert an inhibitor into a degrader? If degradation activity requires very specific molecular features, it will be difficult to find new degraders and challenging to optimize those degraders toward drugs. Herein, we demonstrate that an unexpectedly wide range of modifications to the degradation-inducing group of the cyclin K degrader CR8 are tolerated, including both aromatic and nonaromatic groups. We used these findings to convert the pan-CDK inhibitors dinaciclib and AT-7519 to Cyclin K degraders, leading to a novel dinaciclib-based compound with improved degradation activity compared to CR8 and confirm the mechanism of degradation. These results suggest that general design principles can be generated for the development and optimization of monovalent degraders.
Keyphrases
  • cell cycle
  • amino acid
  • cell proliferation
  • small molecule
  • binding protein
  • protein protein