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Development of Substituted Phenyl Dihydrouracil as the Novel Achiral Cereblon Ligands for Targeted Protein Degradation.


ABSTRACT: Glutarimides such as thalidomide, pomalidomide, and lenalidomide are the most frequently used ligands to recruit E3 ubiquitin ligase cereblon (CRBN) for the development of proteolysis-targeting chimeras (PROTACs). Due to the rapid and spontaneous racemization of glutarimides, most CRBN-recruiting PROTACs are synthesized as a mixture of racemates or diastereomers. Since the (S)-enantiomer is primarily responsible for binding to CRBN, the existence of the largely inactive (R)-enantiomer complicates the drug development process. Herein, we report that substituted achiral phenyl dihydrouracil (PDHU) can be used as a novel class of CRBN ligands for the development of PROTACs. Although the parent PDHU has a minimal binding affinity to CRBN, we found that some substituted PDHUs had a comparable binding affinity to lenalidomide. Structural modeling provided a further understanding of the molecular interactions between PDHU ligands and CRBN. PDHUs also have greater stability than lenalidomide. Finally, potent BRD4 degraders were developed by employing trisubstituted PDHUs.

SUBMITTER: Xie H 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC10398712 | biostudies-literature | 2023 Feb

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Development of Substituted Phenyl Dihydrouracil as the Novel Achiral Cereblon Ligands for Targeted Protein Degradation.

Xie Haibo H   Li Chunrong C   Tang Hua H   Tandon Ira I   Liao Junzhuo J   Roberts Brett L BL   Zhao Yu Y   Tang Weiping W  

Journal of medicinal chemistry 20230207 4


Glutarimides such as thalidomide, pomalidomide, and lenalidomide are the most frequently used ligands to recruit E3 ubiquitin ligase cereblon (CRBN) for the development of proteolysis-targeting chimeras (PROTACs). Due to the rapid and spontaneous racemization of glutarimides, most CRBN-recruiting PROTACs are synthesized as a mixture of racemates or diastereomers. Since the (<i>S</i>)-enantiomer is primarily responsible for binding to CRBN, the existence of the largely inactive (<i>R</i>)-enantio  ...[more]

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