| Literature DB >> 31902710 |
Peter S Dragovich1, Pragya Adhikari2, Robert A Blake2, Nicole Blaquiere2, Jinhua Chen3, Yun-Xing Cheng4, Willem den Besten2, Jinping Han4, Steven J Hartman2, Jintang He2, Mingtao He4, Ellen Rei Ingalla2, Amrita V Kamath2, Tracy Kleinheinz2, Tommy Lai3, Douglas D Leipold2, Chun Sing Li3, Qi Liu4, Jiawei Lu5, Ying Lu3, Fanwei Meng4, Lingyao Meng2, Carl Ng2, Kaishan Peng5, Gail Lewis Phillips2, Thomas H Pillow2, Rebecca K Rowntree2, Jack D Sadowsky2, Deepak Sampath2, Leanna Staben2, Steven T Staben2, John Wai3, Kunpeng Wan3, Xinxin Wang3, BinQing Wei2, Ingrid E Wertz2, Jianfeng Xin4, Keyang Xu2, Hui Yao3, Richard Zang2, Donglu Zhang2, Hao Zhou3, Yongxin Zhao3.
Abstract
Chimeric molecules which effect intracellular degradation of target proteins via E3 ligase-mediated ubiquitination (e.g., PROTACs) are currently of high interest in medicinal chemistry. However, these entities are relatively large compounds that often possess molecular characteristics which may compromise oral bioavailability, solubility, and/or in vivo pharmacokinetic properties. Accordingly, we explored whether conjugation of chimeric degraders to monoclonal antibodies using technologies originally developed for cytotoxic payloads might provide alternate delivery options for these novel agents. In this report we describe the construction of several degrader-antibody conjugates comprised of two distinct ERα-targeting degrader entities and three independent ADC linker modalities. We subsequently demonstrate the antigen-dependent delivery to MCF7-neo/HER2 cells of the degrader payloads that are incorporated into these conjugates. We also provide evidence for efficient intracellular degrader release from one of the employed linkers. In addition, preliminary data are described which suggest that reasonably favorable in vivo stability properties are associated with the linkers utilized to construct the degrader conjugates.Entities:
Keywords: Antibody-drug conjugates; Chimeric protein degraders; Drug delivery; Estrogen receptor
Year: 2019 PMID: 31902710 DOI: 10.1016/j.bmcl.2019.126907
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Bioorg Med Chem Lett ISSN: 0960-894X Impact factor: 2.823