Selective Degradation of GSPT1 by Cereblon Modulators Identified via a Focused Combinatorial Library

Chelsea E. Powell(Harvard University), Guangyan Du(Harvard University), Jianwei Che(Harvard University), Zhixiang He(Harvard University), Katherine A. Donovan(Harvard University), Hong Yue(Harvard University), Eric S. Wang(Harvard University), Radosław P. Nowak(Harvard University), Tinghu Zhang(Harvard University), Eric S. Fischer(Harvard University), Nathanael S. Gray(Harvard University)
ACS Chemical Biology
August 31, 2020
Cited by 84Open Access
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Abstract

Cereblon (CRBN) is an E3 ligase adapter protein that can be reprogrammed by imide-class compounds such as thalidomide, lenalidomide, and pomalidomide to induce the degradation of neo-substrate proteins. In order to identify additional small molecule CRBN modulators, we implemented a focused combinatorial library approach where we fused an imide-based CRBN-binding pharmacophore to a heterocyclic scaffold, which could be further elaborated. We screened the library for CRBN-dependent antiproliferative activity in the multiple myeloma cell line MM1.S and identified five hit compounds. Quantitative chemical proteomics of hit compounds revealed that they induced selective degradation of GSPT1, a translation termination factor that is currently being explored as a therapeutic target for the treatment of acute myeloid leukemia. Molecular docking studies with CRBN and GSPT1 followed by analogue synthesis identified a possible hydrogen bond interaction with the central pyrimidine ring as a molecular determinant of hit compounds' selectivity. This study demonstrates that a focused combinatorial library design, phenotypic screening, and chemical proteomics can provide a suitable workflow to efficiently identify novel CRBN modulators.


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