| Literature DB >> 32718354 |
Yonghan He1, Sajid Khan1, Zhiguang Huo2, Dongwen Lv1, Xuan Zhang3, Xingui Liu1, Yaxia Yuan1, Robert Hromas4, Mingjiang Xu5, Guangrong Zheng3, Daohong Zhou6.
Abstract
Proteolysis targeting chimeras (PROTACs) are heterobifunctional small molecules that utilize the ubiquitin proteasome system (UPS) to degrade proteins of interest (POI). PROTACs are potentially superior to conventional small molecule inhibitors (SMIs) because of their unique mechanism of action (MOA, i.e., degrading POI in a sub-stoichiometric manner), ability to target "undruggable" and mutant proteins, and improved target selectivity. Therefore, PROTACs have become an emerging technology for the development of novel targeted anticancer therapeutics. In fact, some of these reported PROTACs exhibit unprecedented efficacy and specificity in degrading various oncogenic proteins and have advanced to various stages of preclinical and clinical development for the treatment of cancer and hematologic malignancy. In this review, we systematically summarize the known PROTACs that have the potential to be used to treat various hematologic malignancies and discuss strategies to improve the safety of PROTACs for clinical application. Particularly, we propose to use the latest human pan-tissue single-cell RNA sequencing data to identify hematopoietic cell type-specific/selective E3 ligases to generate tumor-specific/selective PROTACs. These PROTACs have the potential to become safer therapeutics for hematologic malignancies because they can overcome some of the on-target toxicities of SMIs and PROTACs.Entities:
Keywords: Cell-specific E3 ligases; Hematologic malignancy; PROTAC; Small molecule inhibitor
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32718354 PMCID: PMC7384229 DOI: 10.1186/s13045-020-00924-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Hematol Oncol ISSN: 1756-8722 Impact factor: 17.388
Comparison among PROTACs, small molecule inhibitors (SMIs), monoclonal antibodies, and therapeutic nucleic acids (TNAs)
| PROTACs | SMIs | Monoclonal antibodies | TNAs |
|---|---|---|---|
| Highly selective | Poor selectivity | Selective | Selective |
| Oral bioavailability can be achieved | Oral bioavailability is easy to achieve | Oral bioavailability is not achievable | Oral bioavailability is not achievable |
| Can target proteins on cell surface and inside a cell | Can target proteins on cell surface and inside a cell | Can only target proteins on cell surface, not inside a cell | Target DNA or RNA |
| Tissue penetration is good | Tissue penetration is good | Tissue penetration is poor | Tissue penetration is poor |
| Metabolic stability is good | Metabolic stability is good | Metabolic stability is poor | Metabolic stability is poor |
| Sub-stoichiometric concentrations are required | Stoichiometric concentrations are required | N/A | N/A |
| Can target proteins without an active binding site i.e. undruggable proteins | Difficult to target proteins without an active binding site | N/A | N/A |
| Can target mutated proteins | Cannot target mutated proteins | N/A | N/A |
| Degradation blocks both enzymatic and scaffolding functions | Inhibition blocks only enzymatic functions | N/A | N/A |
Fig. 1Schematic representation depicting different strategies of protein suppression. a PROTAC recruits an E3 ligase to a POI followed by polyubiquitination of the POI by an E2 conjugating enzyme. The polyubiquitinated POI is recognized and degraded by the proteasome. Once the POI is degraded, the PROTAC molecule can be recycled to induce the next round of POI degradation, thus working in a sub-stoichiometric manner. b A small molecule inhibitor (SMI) typically binds at the active site of a POI to inhibit the enzymatic functions of the POI. c A monoclonal antibody (mAb) binds to a cell surface receptor to block the signal transduction stimulated by a ligand, a growth factor or a cytokine. d siRNA binds to its targeted mRNA transcript in a complementary manner to induce mRNA cleavage and consequently translational suppression. e An antibody-PROTAC conjugate (Ab-PROTAC) is designed by linking a PROTAC to a mAb. Once an Ab-PROTAC binds to its cell surface receptor, it is internalized into the cytosol through endosomes. In the cytosol, an active PROTAC releases from Ab-PROTAC through lysosomal pathway which induces the degradation of POI
Fig. 2Design and mechanism of homo-PROTACs and light-controllable PROTACs. a Design and mechanism of homo-PROTACs. A homo-PROTAC is consisted of two E3 ligase ligand molecules connected via a linker. Homo-PROTAC recruits an E3 ligase molecule to another E3 ligase molecule followed by bidirectional polyubiquitination of E3 ligase molecules and subsequent degradation of the E3 ligase by the proteasome. b Design and mechanism of light-controllable PROTACs. In a light-controllable PROTAC, a photo-removable group is attached to the POI ligand or E3 ligand or linker. Upon light irradiation, the photo-removable group is detached from the light-controllable PROTAC converting it to an active PROTAC for the proteasomal degradation of POI
Targets and efficacy of PROTACs in hematologic malignancies
| In vitro efficacy | In vivo efficacy | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target | E3 ligase | Compound | Disease | Efficacy (EC | Degradation (DC | Model and efficacy | Degradation | Ref. |
| ALK | CRBN | TL13-112 | ALCL | Karpas299 (<50 nM); SU-DHL-1 (<50 nM) | Karpas299 (DC50: 40 nM) | NA | NA | [ |
| Bcl-6 | CRBN | PROTAC 15 | DLBCL | PROTAC | 1 μM of | NA | NA | [ |
| Bcl-xL | VHL | DT2216 | T-ALL | MOLT-4 (52 nM) | MOLT-4 (DC50: 63 nM; Dmax: 90.8%) | [ | ||
| BCR-ABL | VHL | SIAIS178 | CML | K562 (24 nM) | K562 (DC50: 8.5 nM) | [ | ||
| BRD4 | CRBN | dBET6 | T-ALL | In a set of 20 T-ALL lines, such as SUPT11(<10 nM) | MOLT4 (DC50< 10 nM) | dBET6 led to degradation of BRD4 in leukemic bone marrow 3 h after treatment | [ | |
| VHL | ARV-771 | MCL | Mino (<20 nM), Z238 (~200 nM) Primary MCL cells (NA) | Mino (NA); primary MCL cells (NA) | ARV-771 (30 mg/kg, daily for 5 days) resulted in the depletion of BRD4 from the spleen and bone marrow | [ | ||
| BTK | CRBN | DD-03-171 | BCL | TMD8-BTK WT (29.2 nM); TMD8-BTK C481S (128 nM); Mino (12 nM) | Effectively degraded BTK at concentrations as low as 100 nM within 4 hours of treatment in Ramos B cells | [ | ||
| CDK6 | CRBN | YX-2-017 | Ph+ ALL | BV173 (NA); SUP-B15 (NA) | BV173 (4 nM); MUTZ-5 (NA); MHH-CALL-4 (NA); SEM (NA); Jurkat (NA) | [ | ||
| FLT-3 | VHL | FLT-3 PROTAC | AML | MV4-11 (0.6 nM); MOLM-14 (NA); OCIAML-3 (>2.8 μM) | MV4-11 (NA) | NA | [ | |
| HDAC6 | CRBN | 12d | MM | MM.1S (EC50=74.9 nM, Emax=63.1%) | MM.1S (DC50: 1.6 nM) | NA | NA | [ |
| Mcl-1 | CRBN | dMCL1-2 | MM | NA | OPM2 (NA) MM.1S (NA) | NA | NA | [ |
| MDM2 | CRBN | MD-224 | ALL; AML | RS4-11 (1.5 nM); MOLM-13 (7.3 nM); MOLM-14 (10.5 nM); SIG-M5 (19.8 nM); ML-2 (4.4 nM) OCL-AML-5 (33.1 nM) | Effectively induced marked depletion of MDM2 at 1 nM in RS4-11 cells | [ | ||
| PRC2 | VHL | UNC6852 | DLBCL | DB (3.4 μM) Pfeiffer (0.41 μM) | DB (DC50/Dmax): EED 0.61 μM/96%; EZH2 0.67 μM/94%; SUZ12 0.59 μM/82%) | NA | NA | [ |
| SMARCA2/4, PBRM1PBRM1 | VHL | ACBI1 | AML | MV-4-11 (29 nM) | MV-4-11 cell (6 nM (SMARCA2), 11 nM (SMARCA4), 32 nM (PBRM1)), Dmax = 100% for SMARCA2/4 and PBRM1 | NA | NA | [ |
| STAT3 | CRBN | SD-36 | AML; ALCL | MOLM-16 (Dmax: 90%) | [ | |||
ALCL anaplastic large-cell lymphoma, ALL acute lymphoblastic leukemia, AML acute myeloid leukemia, BCL B cell lymphoma, CML chronic myelogenous leukemia, DLBCL diffused large B cell lymphoma, MCL mantle cell lymphoma, MM multiple myeloma, Ph+ ALL Philadelphia chromosome-positive acute lymphoblastic leukemia, T-ALL T cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia
Fig. 3Heatmap of single-cell expression of 57 E3 ligases in hematopoietic tissues. The levels of single-cell expression of 57 E3 ligases in different types of hematopoietic cells from the peripheral blood, bone marrow, and spleen in human adults were abstracted from the Human Cell Landscape (HCL) data. In the heatmap, each row represents a cell type, and each column represents an E3 ligase. The color legend shown on the right was determined by averaging the expression values of all cells within a specific cell type. These E3 ligases were clustered by the hierarchical clustering algorithm, and the resulting dendrogram was shown at the bottom. The 57 E3 ligases presented in the figure were chosen according to the criteria: E3 ligases with an average expression value > 0.5 in at least one cell type. Single cell RNA-sequencing (scRNA-seq) data were from the website: https://figshare.com/articles/HCL_DGE_Data/7235471.