Dundee: Scientists at the University of Dundee have developed a
super-targeted method of destroying malevolent proteins in tumour cells,
removing the threat of collateral damage to surrounding proteins. The research team led by Dr Alessio Ciulli in the College of Life
Sciences at Dundee has developed a small molecule that can hone in
highly selectively on a single protein, BRD4, which has emerged as an
attractive drug target for cancer.
BRD4 and its sister proteins BRD2 and BRD3 are members of a group of
proteins known as the BET bromodomains. These have previously been
identified as being strong targets for drug development.
However, their potential has been limited due to the different BET
bromodomains all being so similar in nature, which has made it extremely
difficult to develop molecules that could hone in on them individually.
This makes it difficult to find potential therapies which can target
one of the proteins without affecting the others.
“The ability to target BRD4 selectively is extremely important as it
makes it a much more attractive target for potential treatments for
diseases including cancer,” said Dr Ciulli. “But current approaches
targeting this protein lack this degree of selectivity, which means they
may be liable to create unwanted side effects and toxicity.”
Dr Ciulli and his team developed a compound called MZ1 that
efficiently triggers the removal of BRD4 inside cells. MZ1 not only
blocks the activity of BRD4 but sparks a process of degradation, which
eventually destroys it. Remarkably, their method has achieved the
highest selectivity yet for targeting and destroying BRD4 over its
homologous BRD2 and BRD3.
“This is a significant development and one which will lead to further
breakthroughs in an increasingly important area of cancer research,”
said Dr Ciulli.
“This is an exciting time for this area of research as we are seeing
significant breakthroughs, includingfindings published at the same time
as ours from other academic and pharma groups in the United States.
Together, all these results provide strong de-risked validation for
therapeutic targeting of unwanted proteins for degradation using this
approach.”
The results of the research are published in the journal ACS Chemical Biology.