4.7 Article

Folate-Guided Protein Degradation by Immunomodulatory Imide Drug-Based Molecular Glues and Proteolysis Targeting Chimeras

Journal

JOURNAL OF MEDICINAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 64, Issue 16, Pages 12273-12285

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jmedchem.1c00901

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NIH [R35CA253027, R01CA218600, R01CA230854, R01CA260666, R01GM122749, P30CA196521]
  2. National Institutes of Health SIG grant [1S10OD025132-01A1]

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This study presents a general strategy for delivering IMiD-based molecular glues and PROTACs to FOLR1-expressing cancer cells, effectively degrading fusion proteins in cancer cells with the potential to ameliorate toxicity.
Molecular glues and proteolysis targeting chimeras (PROTACs) are promising new therapeutic modalities. However, the lack of specificity for molecular glue- or PROTAC-mediated proteolysis in cancer cells versus normal cells raises potential toxicity concerns that will likely limit their clinical applications. Here, we developed a general strategy to deliver immunomodulatory imide drug (IMiD)-based molecular glues and PROTACs to folate receptor alpha (FOLR1)-positive cancer cells. Specifically, we designed a folate-caged pomalidomide prodrug, FA-S2-POMA, by incorporating a folate group as a caging and guiding element and validated its degradation effect on its neo-substrates in FOLR1-positive cancer cells in a FOLR1-dependent manner. We also developed a folate-caged pomalidomide-based anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK) PROTAC, FA-S2-MS4048, which effectively degraded ALK fusion proteins in cancer cells, again in a FOLR1-dependent manner. This novel approach provides a generalizable platform for the targeted delivery of IMiD-based molecular glues and PROTACs to FOLR1-expressing cancer cells with the potential to ameliorate toxicity.

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