A selective and orally bioavailable VHL-recruiting PROTAC achieves SMARCA2 degradation in vivo

Christiane Kofink(Boehringer Ingelheim (Austria)), Nicole Trainor(University of Dundee), Barbara Mair(Boehringer Ingelheim (Austria)), Simon Wöhrle(Boehringer Ingelheim (Austria)), Melanie Wurm(Boehringer Ingelheim (Austria)), Nikolai Mischerikow(Boehringer Ingelheim (Austria)), Michael J. Roy(University of Dundee), Gerd Bader(Boehringer Ingelheim (Austria)), Peter Greb(Boehringer Ingelheim (Austria)), Géraldine Garavel(Boehringer Ingelheim (Austria)), Emelyne Diers(University of Dundee), Ross McLennan(University of Dundee), Claire Whitworth(University of Dundee), Vesna Vetma(University of Dundee), Klaus Rumpel(Boehringer Ingelheim (Austria)), Maximilian Scharnweber(Boehringer Ingelheim (Austria)), Julian E. Fuchs(Boehringer Ingelheim (Austria)), Thomas Gerstberger(Boehringer Ingelheim (Austria)), Yunhai Cui(Boehringer Ingelheim (Germany)), Gabriela Gremel(Boehringer Ingelheim (Austria)), Paolo Chetta(Boehringer Ingelheim (Austria)), Stefan Hopf(Boehringer Ingelheim (Austria)), Nicole Budano(Boehringer Ingelheim (Austria)), Joerg Rinnenthal(Boehringer Ingelheim (Austria)), Gerhard Gmaschitz(Boehringer Ingelheim (Austria)), Moriz Mayer(Boehringer Ingelheim (Austria)), Manfred Koegl(Boehringer Ingelheim (Austria)), Alessio Ciulli(University of Dundee), Harald Weinstabl(Boehringer Ingelheim (Austria)), William Farnaby(University of Dundee)
Nature Communications
October 10, 2022
Cited by 204Open Access
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Abstract

Targeted protein degradation offers an alternative modality to classical inhibition and holds the promise of addressing previously undruggable targets to provide novel therapeutic options for patients. Heterobifunctional molecules co-recruit a target protein and an E3 ligase, resulting in ubiquitylation and proteosome-dependent degradation of the target. In the clinic, the oral route of administration is the option of choice but has only been achieved so far by CRBN- recruiting bifunctional degrader molecules. We aimed to achieve orally bioavailable molecules that selectively degrade the BAF Chromatin Remodelling complex ATPase SMARCA2 over its closely related paralogue SMARCA4, to allow in vivo evaluation of the synthetic lethality concept of SMARCA2 dependency in SMARCA4-deficient cancers. Here we outline structure- and property-guided approaches that led to orally bioavailable VHL-recruiting degraders. Our tool compound, ACBI2, shows selective degradation of SMARCA2 over SMARCA4 in ex vivo human whole blood assays and in vivo efficacy in SMARCA4-deficient cancer models. This study demonstrates the feasibility for broadening the E3 ligase and physicochemical space that can be utilised for achieving oral efficacy with bifunctional molecules.


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