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DRUG DEVELOPMENT. Phthalimide conjugation as a strategy for in vivo target protein degradation.

Science (New York, N.Y.) (2015-05-23)
Georg E Winter, Dennis L Buckley, Joshiawa Paulk, Justin M Roberts, Amanda Souza, Sirano Dhe-Paganon, James E Bradner
RESUMEN

The development of effective pharmacological inhibitors of multidomain scaffold proteins, notably transcription factors, is a particularly challenging problem. In part, this is because many small-molecule antagonists disrupt the activity of only one domain in the target protein. We devised a chemical strategy that promotes ligand-dependent target protein degradation using as an example the transcriptional coactivator BRD4, a protein critical for cancer cell growth and survival. We appended a competitive antagonist of BET bromodomains to a phthalimide moiety to hijack the cereblon E3 ubiquitin ligase complex. The resultant compound, dBET1, induced highly selective cereblon-dependent BET protein degradation in vitro and in vivo and delayed leukemia progression in mice. A second series of probes resulted in selective degradation of the cytosolic protein FKBP12. This chemical strategy for controlling target protein stability may have implications for therapeutically targeting previously intractable proteins.

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Sigma-Aldrich
(+)-JQ-1 carboxylic acid, ≥95% (HPLC)
Sigma-Aldrich
dBET1, ≥98% (HPLC)