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Programming inactive RNA-binding small molecules into bioactive degraders

Authors :
Yuquan Tong
Yeongju Lee
Xiaohui Liu
Jessica L. Childs-Disney
Blessy M. Suresh
Raphael I. Benhamou
Chunying Yang
Weimin Li
Matthew G. Costales
Hafeez S. Haniff
Sonja Sievers
Daniel Abegg
Tristan Wegner
Tiffany O. Paulisch
Elizabeth Lekah
Maison Grefe
Gogce Crynen
Montina Van Meter
Tenghui Wang
Quentin M. R. Gibaut
John L. Cleveland
Alexander Adibekian
Frank Glorius
Herbert Waldmann
Matthew D. Disney
Source :
Nature. 618:169-179
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2023.

Abstract

Target occupancy is often insufficient to elicit biological activity, particularly for RNA, compounded by the longstanding challenges surrounding the molecular recognition of RNA structures by small molecules. Here we studied molecular recognition patterns between a natural-product-inspired small-molecule collection and three-dimensionally folded RNA structures. Mapping these interaction landscapes across the human transcriptome defined structure–activity relationships. Although RNA-binding compounds that bind to functional sites were expected to elicit a biological response, most identified interactions were predicted to be biologically inert as they bind elsewhere. We reasoned that, for such cases, an alternative strategy to modulate RNA biology is to cleave the target through a ribonuclease-targeting chimera, where an RNA-binding molecule is appended to a heterocycle that binds to and locally activates RNase L1. Overlay of the substrate specificity for RNase L with the binding landscape of small molecules revealed many favourable candidate binders that might be bioactive when converted into degraders. We provide a proof of concept, designing selective degraders for the precursor to the disease-associated microRNA-155 (pre-miR-155), JUN mRNA and MYC mRNA. Thus, small-molecule RNA-targeted degradation can be leveraged to convert strong, yet inactive, binding interactions into potent and specific modulators of RNA function.

Subjects

Subjects :
Multidisciplinary

Details

ISSN :
14764687 and 00280836
Volume :
618
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........8ddd01fdc061bbc5774956f8b2b5aaea
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-023-06091-8