posted on 2025-04-23, 13:23authored byAnthony K Edmonds, Dimitrios-Ilias Balourdas, Graham P Marsh, Robert Felix, Bradley Brasher, Jeff Cooper, Cari Graber-Feesl, Madhu Kollareddy, Karim Malik, Helen Stewart, Timothy JT Chevassut, Ella Lineham, Mohan RajasekaranMohan Rajasekaran, John SpencerJohn Spencer, et al.
<p dir="ltr">Degraders with dual activity against BRD4 and CBP/EP300 were designed. A structure-guided design approach was taken to assess and test potential exit vectors on the dual BRD4 and CBP/EP300 inhibitor, ISOX-DUAL. Candidate degrader panels revealed that VHL-recruiting moieties could mediate dose-responsive ubiquitination of BRD4. A panel of CRBN-recruiting thalidomide-based degraders was unable to induce ubiquitination or degradation of target proteins. High-resolution protein cocrystal structures revealed an unexpected interaction between the thalidomide moiety and Trp81 on the first bromodomain of BRD4. The inability to form a ternary complex provides a potential rationale for the lack of degrader activity with these compounds, some of which have remarkable affinities close to those of (+)-JQ1, as low as 65 nM in a biochemical assay, vs 1.5 μM for their POI ligand, ISOX-DUAL. Such a “degrader collapse” may represent an under-reported mechanism by which some putative degrader molecules are inactive with respect to target protein degradation.</p>
Funding
Developing PROTACs from chemical probes - applications in cancer research : TOCRIS COOKSON | 1955336