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Small-molecule PROTAC mediates targeted protein degradation to treat STAT3-dependent epithelial cancer
Jinmei Jin, … , Shuyang Sun, Xin Luan
Jinmei Jin, … , Shuyang Sun, Xin Luan
Published November 22, 2022
Citation Information: JCI Insight. 2022;7(22):e160606. https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.160606.
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Research Article Oncology Therapeutics

Small-molecule PROTAC mediates targeted protein degradation to treat STAT3-dependent epithelial cancer

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Abstract

The aberrant activation of STAT3 is associated with the etiology and progression in a variety of malignant epithelial-derived tumors, including head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) and colorectal cancer (CRC). Due to the lack of an enzymatic catalytic site or a ligand-binding pocket, there are no small-molecule inhibitors directly targeting STAT3 that have been approved for clinical translation. Emerging proteolysis targeting chimeric (PROTAC) technology–based approach represents a potential strategy to overcome the limitations of conventional inhibitors and inhibit activation of STAT3 and downstream genes. In this study, the heterobifunctional small-molecule–based PROTACs are successfully prepared from toosendanin (TSN), with 1 portion binding to STAT3 and the other portion binding to an E3 ubiquitin ligase. The optimized lead PROTAC (TSM-1) exhibits superior selectivity, potency, and robust antitumor effects in STAT3-dependent HNSCC and CRC — especially in clinically relevant patient-derived xenografts (PDX) and patient-derived organoids (PDO). The following mechanistic investigation identifies the reduced expression of critical downstream STAT3 effectors, through which TSM-1 promotes cell cycle arrest and apoptosis in tumor cells. These findings provide the first demonstration to our knowledge of a successful PROTAC-targeting strategy in STAT3-dependent epithelial cancer.

Authors

Jinmei Jin, Yaping Wu, Zeng Zhao, Ye Wu, Yu-dong Zhou, Sanhong Liu, Qingyan Sun, Guizhu Yang, Jiayi Lin, Dale G. Nagle, Jiangjiang Qin, Zhiyuan Zhang, Hong-zhuan Chen, Weidong Zhang, Shuyang Sun, Xin Luan

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Figure 2

Design, synthesis, and screening of TSMs derivatives.

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Design, synthesis, and screening of TSMs derivatives.
(A) Computer simul...
(A) Computer simulation of the combination between TSN and STAT3 (PDB, 1BG1), where a hydrogen bond was formed between TSN and Glu638 or Ser613 on STAT3. (B) Computer simulation of appropriate site for tethering TSN to lenalidomide (4CI2) for the design of TSM-1. (C) Synthetic route of preparing TSM-1. (D–G) TSM-1 significantly increased the thermal stability of STAT3 in CETSA assays in CAL33 (52°C and 55°C) (E and F) and HCT116 (50°C) cells (D and G) (n = 3 replicates). (H) MST analysis of TSN binding to STAT3 (Kd = 296 nM). (I) MST analysis of TSM-1 binding to STAT3 (Kd = 308 nM). (J) CAL33 cells proliferation was detected using CCK-8 assays after treatment with TSN or TSM-1 for 48 hours (n = 3 replicates). Among them, the degrader TSM-1 exhibited pronounced antitumor effects. *P < 0.05, ** P < 0.01, and *** P < 0.001 when compared with the control group. P values are from 2-way ANOVA with Tukey’s multiple-comparison test (F, G, and J).

Copyright © 2023 American Society for Clinical Investigation
ISSN 2379-3708

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