» Articles » PMID: 31513432

Induced Degradation of Protein Kinases by Bifunctional Small Molecules: a Next-generation Strategy

Overview
Specialties Chemistry
Pharmacology
Date 2019 Sep 13
PMID 31513432
Citations 7
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

: Protein kinases are a major target for small-molecule drug development. However, relatively few compounds are free of off-target toxicity and reach the clinic. Because the 500-plus kinases share conserved ATP-binding clefts, the site targeted by competitive inhibitors, generation of specific therapeutics remains a nearly intractable challenge. : Inducing degradation, instead of inhibition by occupancy-driven drugs, is an emerging strategy that offers the long-sought specificity, as well as mechanistic benefits. Currently approved inhibitors require steady-state binding and leave proteins intact for interactions in multi-protein complexes. After a general background about induced protein degradation, perspectives on protein kinases are provided. : Induced degradation by state-of-the-art compounds (proteolysis-targeting chimeras, PROTACs) has been shown for protein kinases, albeit in early pre-clinical stages. Further work is required to expand the number of enzymes that could be exploited to direct proteins for degradation by ubiquitylation. In addition, despite the simple modularity of the chimeras, generation of hits will require empirical approaches due to the role of protein-protein interactions and distribution of tagging sites. However, given the advantages of degradation, drug discovery efforts targeting protein kinases should increasingly shift toward generation and screening of inducers of degradation and away from occupancy-based inhibitors of old.

Citing Articles

Polypeptide Substrate Accessibility Hypothesis: Gain-of-Function R206H Mutation Allosterically Affects Activin Receptor-like Protein Kinase Activity.

Groppe J, Lu G, Tandang-Silvas M, Pathi A, Konda S, Wu J Biomolecules. 2023; 13(7).

PMID: 37509165 PMC: 10376983. DOI: 10.3390/biom13071129.


Degradation of neurodegenerative disease-associated TDP-43 aggregates and oligomers via a proteolysis-targeting chimera.

Tseng Y, Lu P, Lee C, He R, Huang Y, Tseng Y J Biomed Sci. 2023; 30(1):27.

PMID: 37101169 PMC: 10131537. DOI: 10.1186/s12929-023-00921-7.


PROTAC Degraders with Ligands Recruiting MDM2 E3 Ubiquitin Ligase: An Updated Perspective.

Han X, Wei W, Sun Y Acta Mater Med. 2022; 1(2):244-259.

PMID: 35734447 PMC: 9211018. DOI: 10.15212/amm-2022-0010.


Targeting Oncoproteins for Degradation by Small Molecule-Based Proteolysis-Targeting Chimeras (PROTACs) in Sex Hormone-Dependent Cancers.

Liu L, Shi L, Wang Z, Zeng J, Wang Y, Xiao H Front Endocrinol (Lausanne). 2022; 13:839857.

PMID: 35370971 PMC: 8971670. DOI: 10.3389/fendo.2022.839857.


New Insights on the Nuclear Functions and Targeting of FAK in Cancer.

Pomella S, Cassandri M, Braghini M, Marampon F, Alisi A, Rota R Int J Mol Sci. 2022; 23(4).

PMID: 35216114 PMC: 8874710. DOI: 10.3390/ijms23041998.