RNA‐PROTACs: Degraders of RNA‐Binding Proteins
Alice Ghidini, Antoine Cléry, François Halloy, Frédéric H.‐T. Allain, Jonathan Hall
Abstract
Abstract Defects in the functions of RNA binding proteins (RBPs) are at the origin of many diseases; however, targeting RBPs with conventional drugs has proven difficult. PROTACs are a new class of drugs that mediate selective degradation of a target protein through a cell's ubiquitination machinery. PROTACs comprise a moiety that binds the selected protein, conjugated to a ligand of an E3 ligase. Herein, we introduce RNA‐PROTACs as a new concept in the targeting of RBPs. These chimeric structures employ small RNA mimics as targeting groups that dock the RNA‐binding site of the RBP, whereupon a conjugated E3‐recruiting peptide derived from the HIF‐1α protein directs the RBP for proteasomal degradation. We performed a proof‐of‐concept demonstration with the degradation of two RBPs—a stem cell factor LIN28 and a splicing factor RBFOX1—and showed their use in cancer cell lines. The RNA‐PROTAC approach opens the way to rapid, selective targeting of RBPs in a rational and general fashion.