Bifunctional Compounds as Molecular Degraders for Integrin-Facilitated Targeted Protein Degradation

Jiwei Zheng(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Wanyi He(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Jing Li(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Xuejia Feng(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Yanyan Li(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Binghua Cheng(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Yimin Zhou(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Meiqing Li(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Ke Liu(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Ximing Shao(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Jianchao Zhang(Southern University of Science and Technology), Hongchang Li(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Liang Chen(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Lijing Fang(Chinese Academy of Sciences)
Journal of the American Chemical Society
November 23, 2022
Cited by 159

Abstract

As effective ways to regulate protein levels, targeted protein degradation technologies have attracted great attention in recent years. Here, we established a novel integrin-facilitated lysosomal degradation (IFLD) strategy to degrade extracellular and cell membrane proteins using bifunctional compounds as molecular degraders. By conjugation of a target protein-binding ligand with an integrin-recognition ligand, the resulting molecular degrader proved to be highly efficient to induce the internalization and subsequent degradation of extracellular or cell membrane proteins in an integrin- and lysosome-dependent manner. As demonstrated in the development of BMS-L1-RGD, which is an efficient programmed death-ligand 1 (PD-L1) degrader validated both in vitro and in vivo, the IFLD strategy expands the toolbox for regulation of secreted and membrane-associated proteins and thus has great potential to be applied in chemical biology and drug discovery.


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