TY - JOUR
T1 - Accelerating PROTAC drug discovery
T2 - Establishing a relationship between ubiquitination and target protein degradation
AU - Gross, Patrick H.
AU - Sheets, Katie J.
AU - Warren, Noël A.
AU - Ghosh, Saptarshi
AU - Varghese, Rebekah E.
AU - Wass (KWass), Katherine E.
AU - Kadimisetty, Karteek
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 The Authors
PY - 2022/11/5
Y1 - 2022/11/5
N2 - PROTACs have emerged as a new class of drugs that can target the “undruggable” proteome by hijacking the ubiquitin proteasome system. Despite PROTACs’ success, most current PROTACs interface with a limited number of E3 ligases, hindering their expansion to many challenging therapeutic uses. Currently, PROTAC drug discovery relies heavily on traditional Western blotting and reporter gene assays which are insensitive and prone to artifacts, respectively. New reliable methods to monitor true PROTAC function (i.e., ubiquitination and subsequent degradation of targets at physiological expression levels) without external tags are essential to accelerate the PROTAC discovery process and to address many unmet therapeutic areas. In this study, we developed a new high-throughput screening technology using “TUBEs” as ubiquitin-binding entities to monitor PROTAC-mediated poly-ubiquitination of native target proteins with exceptional sensitivity. As a proof of concept, targets including BRD3, Aurora A Kinase, and KRAS were used to demonstrate that ubiquitination kinetics can reliably establish the rank order potencies of PROTAC with variable ligands and linkers. PROTAC-treated cell lysates with the highest levels of endogenous target protein ubiquitination - termed “UbMax” - display excellent correlations with DC50 values obtained from traditional Western blots with the added benefits of being high throughput, providing improved sensitivity, and reducing technical errors.
AB - PROTACs have emerged as a new class of drugs that can target the “undruggable” proteome by hijacking the ubiquitin proteasome system. Despite PROTACs’ success, most current PROTACs interface with a limited number of E3 ligases, hindering their expansion to many challenging therapeutic uses. Currently, PROTAC drug discovery relies heavily on traditional Western blotting and reporter gene assays which are insensitive and prone to artifacts, respectively. New reliable methods to monitor true PROTAC function (i.e., ubiquitination and subsequent degradation of targets at physiological expression levels) without external tags are essential to accelerate the PROTAC discovery process and to address many unmet therapeutic areas. In this study, we developed a new high-throughput screening technology using “TUBEs” as ubiquitin-binding entities to monitor PROTAC-mediated poly-ubiquitination of native target proteins with exceptional sensitivity. As a proof of concept, targets including BRD3, Aurora A Kinase, and KRAS were used to demonstrate that ubiquitination kinetics can reliably establish the rank order potencies of PROTAC with variable ligands and linkers. PROTAC-treated cell lysates with the highest levels of endogenous target protein ubiquitination - termed “UbMax” - display excellent correlations with DC50 values obtained from traditional Western blots with the added benefits of being high throughput, providing improved sensitivity, and reducing technical errors.
KW - Drug discovery
KW - PROTACs
KW - TUBE technology
KW - Targeted protein degradation
KW - Ubiquitination
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85137277124
U2 - 10.1016/j.bbrc.2022.08.048
DO - 10.1016/j.bbrc.2022.08.048
M3 - Article
C2 - 36084553
AN - SCOPUS:85137277124
SN - 0006-291X
VL - 628
SP - 68
EP - 75
JO - Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications
JF - Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications
ER -