Protein-Based Degraders: From Chemical Biology Tools to Neo-Therapeutics
Lisha Ou, Mekedlawit Setegne, Jeandele Elliot, Fangfang Shen, Laura M. K. Dassama
Abstract
The nascent field of targeted protein degradation (TPD) could revolutionize biomedicine due to the ability of degrader molecules to selectively modulate disease-relevant proteins. A key limitation to the broad application of TPD is its dependence on small-molecule ligands to target proteins of interest. This leaves unstructured proteins or those lacking defined cavities for small-molecule binding out of the scope of many TPD technologies. The use of proteins, peptides, and nucleic acids (otherwise known as "biologics") as the protein-targeting moieties in degraders addresses this limitation. In the following sections, we provide a comprehensive and critical review of studies that have used proteins and peptides to mediate the degradation and hence the functional control of otherwise challenging disease-relevant protein targets. We describe existing platforms for protein/peptide-based ligand identification and the drug delivery systems that might be exploited for the delivery of biologic-based degraders. Throughout the Review, we underscore the successes, challenges, and opportunities of using protein-based degraders as chemical biology tools to spur discoveries, elucidate mechanisms, and act as a new therapeutic modality.