Nature Communications (Oct 2024)

Principles of paralog-specific targeted protein degradation engaging the C-degron E3 KLHDC2

  • Daniel C. Scott,
  • Suresh Dharuman,
  • Elizabeth Griffith,
  • Sergio C. Chai,
  • Jarrid Ronnebaum,
  • Moeko T. King,
  • Rajendra Tangallapally,
  • Chan Lee,
  • Clifford T. Gee,
  • Lei Yang,
  • Yong Li,
  • Victoria C. Loudon,
  • Ha Won Lee,
  • Jason Ochoada,
  • Darcie J. Miller,
  • Thilina Jayasinghe,
  • Joao A. Paulo,
  • Stephen J. Elledge,
  • J. Wade Harper,
  • Taosheng Chen,
  • Richard E. Lee,
  • Brenda A. Schulman

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-52966-3
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
pp. 1 – 19

Abstract

Read online

Abstract PROTAC® (proteolysis-targeting chimera) molecules induce proximity between an E3 ligase and protein-of-interest (POI) to target the POI for ubiquitin-mediated degradation. Cooperative E3-PROTAC-POI complexes have potential to achieve neo-substrate selectivity beyond that established by POI binding to the ligand alone. Here, we extend the collection of ubiquitin ligases employable for cooperative ternary complex formation to include the C-degron E3 KLHDC2. Ligands were identified that engage the C-degron binding site in KLHDC2, subjected to structure-based improvement, and linked to JQ1 for BET-family neo-substrate recruitment. Consideration of the exit vector emanating from the ligand engaged in KLHDC2’s U-shaped degron-binding pocket enabled generation of SJ46421, which drives formation of a remarkably cooperative, paralog-selective ternary complex with BRD3BD2. Meanwhile, screening pro-drug variants enabled surmounting cell permeability limitations imposed by acidic moieties resembling the KLHDC2-binding C-degron. Selectivity for BRD3 compared to other BET-family members is further manifested in ubiquitylation in vitro, and prodrug version SJ46420-mediated degradation in cells. Selectivity is also achieved for the ubiquitin ligase, overcoming E3 auto-inhibition to engage KLHDC2, but not the related KLHDC1, KLHDC3, or KLHDC10 E3s. In sum, our study establishes neo-substrate-specific targeted protein degradation via KLHDC2, and provides a framework for developing selective PROTAC protein degraders employing C-degron E3 ligases.