The potential of proteolytic chimeras as pharmalogical tools and therapeutic agents

Other authors

Universitat Ramon Llull. IQS

Publication date

2020-12



Abstract

The induction of protein degradation in a highly selective and efficient way by means of druggable molecules is known as targeted protein degradation (TPD). TPD emerged in the literature as a revolutionary idea: a heterobifunctional chimera with the capacity of creating an interaction between a protein of interest (POI) and a E3 ubiquitin ligase will induce a process of events in the POI, including ubiquitination, targeting to the proteasome, proteolysis and functional silencing, acting as a sort of degradative knockdown. With this programmed protein degradation, toxic and disease-causing proteins could be depleted from cells with potentially effective low drug doses. The proof-of-principle validation of this hypothesis in many studies has made the TPD strategy become a new attractive paradigm for the development of therapies for the treatment of multiple unmet diseases. Indeed, since the initial protacs (Proteolysis targeting chimeras) were posited in the 2000s, the TPD field has expanded extraordinarily, developing innovative chemistry and exploiting multiple degradation approaches. In this article, we review the breakthroughs and recent novel concepts in this highly active discipline.

Document Type

Article


Published version

Language

English

Pages

31 p.

Publisher

MDPI

Published in

Molecules. Vol.25, n.24 (2020), 5956

Grant Agreement Number

info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/CSIC-COV19/202020E161

info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/MCIU-AEI-FEDER/CTQ2017-85378-R

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Rights

Attribution 4.0 International

Attribution 4.0 International

© L'autor/a

This item appears in the following Collection(s)

IQS [794]