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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Induced protein degradation: an emerging drug discovery paradigm

Ashton C. Lai, +1 more
- 01 Feb 2017 - 
- Vol. 16, Iss: 2, pp 101-114
TLDR
Induced protein degradation has the potential to reduce systemic drug exposure, the ability to counteract increased target protein expression that often accompanies inhibition of protein function and the potential ability to target proteins that are not currently therapeutically tractable, such as transcription factors, scaffolding and regulatory proteins.
Abstract
Small-molecule drug discovery has traditionally focused on occupancy of a binding site that directly affects protein function, and this approach typically precludes targeting proteins that lack such amenable sites. Furthermore, high systemic drug exposures may be needed to maintain sufficient target inhibition in vivo, increasing the risk of undesirable off-target effects. Induced protein degradation is an alternative approach that is event-driven: upon drug binding, the target protein is tagged for elimination. Emerging technologies based on proteolysis-targeting chimaeras (PROTACs) that exploit cellular quality control machinery to selectively degrade target proteins are attracting considerable attention in the pharmaceutical industry owing to the advantages they could offer over traditional small-molecule strategies. These advantages include the potential to reduce systemic drug exposure, the ability to counteract increased target protein expression that often accompanies inhibition of protein function and the potential ability to target proteins that are not currently therapeutically tractable, such as transcription factors, scaffolding and regulatory proteins.

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Citations
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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Development of Protacs to Target Cancer-promoting Proteins for Ubiquitination and Degradation

TL;DR: It is shown that an estradiol- based Protac can enforce the ubiquitination and degradation of the α isoform of ER in vitro, and a dihydroxytestosterone-based Protac introduced into cells promotes the rapid disappearance of AR in a proteasome-dependent manner.
Journal ArticleDOI

Small-molecule hydrophobic tagging–induced degradation of HaloTag fusion proteins

TL;DR: In vivo utility of hydrophobic tagging of HaloTag fusion proteins affords small molecule control over any protein of interest, making it an ideal system for validating potential drug targets in disease models.
Journal ArticleDOI

HaloPROTACS: Use of Small Molecule PROTACs to Induce Degradation of HaloTag Fusion Proteins

TL;DR: The design of a novel class of PROTACs are reported that incorporate small molecule VHL ligands to successfully degrade HaloTag7 fusion proteins and are useful chemical genetic tools, due to their ability to chemically knock down widely used HaloTag 7 fusion proteins in a general fashion.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ubiquitin and Membrane Protein Turnover: From Cradle to Grave

TL;DR: This review summarizes the current understanding of how ubiquitin modification influences cargo trafficking, with a special emphasis on mechanisms of quality control and quality maintenance in the secretory and endocytic pathways.
Journal ArticleDOI

Discovery of RG7112: A Small-Molecule MDM2 Inhibitor in Clinical Development.

TL;DR: RG7112 is the first clinical small-molecule MDM2 inhibitor designed to occupy the p53-binding pocket ofMDM2, which stabilizes p53 and activates the p 53 pathway, leading to cell cycle arrest, apoptosis, and inhibition or regression of human tumor xenografts.
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