| Literature DB >> 34965125 |
Mingxing Teng1, Wenchao Lu2, Katherine A Donovan1,3, Jialin Sun1,3, Noah M Krupnick1, Radosław P Nowak1,3, Yen-Der Li4,5, Adam S Sperling4,5, Tinghu Zhang2, Benjamin L Ebert4,5,6, Eric S Fischer1,3, Nathanael S Gray2.
Abstract
Immunomodulatory drugs are a class of drugs approved for the treatment of multiple myeloma. These compounds exert their clinical effects by inducing interactions between the CRL4CRBN E3 ubiquitin ligase and a C2H2 zinc finger degron motif, resulting in degradation of degron-containing targets. However, although many cellular proteins feature the degron motif, only a subset of those are degradable via this strategy. Here, we demonstrated that FPFT-2216, a previously reported "molecular glue" compound, degrades PDE6D, in addition to IKZF1, IKZF3, and CK1α. We used FPFT-2216 as a starting point for a focused medicinal chemistry campaign and developed TMX-4100 and TMX-4116, which exhibit greater selectivity for degrading PDE6D and CK1α, respectively. We also showed that the region in PDE6D that interacts with the FPFT-2216 derivatives is not the previously pursued prenyl-binding pocket. Moreover, we found that PDE6D depletion by FPFT-2216 does not impede the growth of KRASG12C-dependent MIA PaCa-2 cells, highlighting the challenges of drugging PDE6D-KRAS. Taken together, the approach we described here represents a general scheme to rapidly develop selective degraders by reprogramming E3 ubiquitin ligase substrate specificity.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34965125 DOI: 10.1021/acs.jmedchem.1c01832
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Chem ISSN: 0022-2623 Impact factor: 8.039