| Literature DB >> 31883964 |
Mei Zeng1, Yuan Xiong1, Nozhat Safaee1, Radosław P Nowak1, Katherine A Donovan1, Christine J Yuan1, Behnam Nabet1, Thomas W Gero1, Frederic Feru1, Lianbo Li2, Sudershan Gondi2, Lincoln J Ombelets1, Chunshan Quan1, Pasi A Jänne3, Milka Kostic1, David A Scott1, Kenneth D Westover4, Eric S Fischer5, Nathanael S Gray6.
Abstract
KRAS is the most frequently mutated oncogene found in pancreatic, colorectal, and lung cancers. Although it has been challenging to identify targeted therapies for cancers harboring KRAS mutations, KRASG12C can be targeted by small-molecule inhibitors that form covalent bonds with cysteine 12 (C12). Here, we designed a library of C12-directed covalent degrader molecules (PROTACs) and subjected them to a rigorous evaluation process to rapidly identify a lead compound. Our lead degrader successfully engaged CRBN in cells, bound KRASG12Cin vitro, induced CRBN/KRASG12C dimerization, and degraded GFP-KRASG12C in reporter cells in a CRBN-dependent manner. However, it failed to degrade endogenous KRASG12C in pancreatic and lung cancer cells. Our data suggest that inability of the lead degrader to effectively poly-ubiquitinate endogenous KRASG12C underlies the lack of activity. We discuss challenges for achieving targeted KRASG12C degradation and proposed several possible solutions which may lead to efficient degradation of endogenous KRASG12C.Entities:
Keywords: CRBN; KRAS(G12C); PROTAC; caner; degrader; targeted protein degradation; ubiquitination
Year: 2019 PMID: 31883964 DOI: 10.1016/j.chembiol.2019.12.006
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Chem Biol ISSN: 2451-9448 Impact factor: 8.116