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  2. Ligand-Directed Photodegradation of Interacting Proteins: Oxidative HER2/HER3 Heterodimer Degradation with a Lapatinib-Derived Photosensitizer

Ligand-Directed Photodegradation of Interacting Proteins: Oxidative HER2/HER3 Heterodimer Degradation with a Lapatinib-Derived Photosensitizer

  • J Med Chem. 2023 Aug 10;66(15):10265-10272. doi: 10.1021/acs.jmedchem.3c00252.
Jingru Qiu 1 Qinghong Liu 1 Peixia Li 1 Qiaoyun Jiang 1 Weijia Chen 1 Donghai Li 2 Guiling Li 2 Gang Shan 1
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 Department of Medicinal Chemistry, Key Laboratory of Chemical Biology (Ministry of Education), School of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Cheeloo College of Medicine, Shandong University, Jinan, Shandong Province 250012, P. R. China.
  • 2 Advanced Medical Research Institute, Meili Lake Translational Research Park, Cheeloo College of Medicine, Shandong University, Jinan, Shandong 250012, P. R. China.
Abstract

In this work, we described a photocatalytic approach, termed ligand-directed photodegradation of interacting proteins (LDPIP), for efficient protein-protein heterodimer degradation. This LDPIP approach utilizes a combination of a photosensitizing protein ligand and appropriate light and molecular oxygen to induce oxidative damage to the ligand-binding protein as well as its interacting protein partner. As a showcase study, a photosensitizing HER2 ligand HER-PS-I was rationally designed based on the FDA-approved HER2 inhibitor lapatinib to efficiently degrade HER2 together with its interacting protein partner HER3, which is thought to induce HER2-targeted therapy resistance and difficult to target by small molecules. HER-PS-I exhibited excellent Anticancer activity against drug-resistant MDA-MB-453 cells and its three-dimensional multicellular spheroids. We hope that this LDPIP approach would find more applications in degrading proteins that are thought undruggable or difficult to drug.

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