Litcius/Paper detail

ATNC: Versatile Nanobody Chimeras for Autophagic Degradation of Intracellular Unligandable and Undruggable Proteins

Huiping He, Chengjian Zhou, Xi Chen

2023Journal of the American Chemical Society18 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Targeted protein degradation (TPD) through the autophagy pathway displays broad substrate scope and is gaining increasing interest in biology and medicine. However, current approaches using small-molecule degraders have limitations due to the lack of versatility, modularity, and ease of implementation and are restricted to addressing only ligandable proteins. Herein, we report a nonsmall molecule-based autophagy-targeting nanobody chimera (ATNC), or phagobody, for selective degradation of intracellular targets, which overcomes these limitations. The core of an ATNC features a nanobody for recruiting proteins as well as an autophagic pathway-directing module. ATNC turns out to be a general, modular, and versatile degradation platform. We show that ATNC can be versatilely implemented in different ways including expressed ATNC intrabodies for ease of use, chemically induced proximity (CIP)-operated logic-gated conditional and tunable degradation, and cyclic cell-penetrating peptide-tethered cell-permeable phagobodies that selectively degrade the undruggable therapeutically relevant HE4 protein, resulting in effective suppression of ovarian cancer cell proliferation and migration. Overall, ATNC represents a general, modular, and versatile targeted degradation platform that degrades unligandable proteins and offers therapeutic potential.

Topics & Concepts

ChemistryAutophagyIntracellularProtein degradationChimera (genetics)Cell biologyComputational biologyModular designBiochemistryBiologyComputer scienceApoptosisOperating systemGeneProtein Degradation and InhibitorsCAR-T cell therapy researchMonoclonal and Polyclonal Antibodies Research