Rapid and Reversible Knockdown of Endogenously Tagged Endosomal Proteins via an Optimized HaloPROTAC Degrader
Author(s) -
Hannah Tovell,
Andrea Testa,
Chiara Maniaci,
Houjiang Zhou,
Alan R. Prescott,
Thomas Macartney,
Alessio Ciulli,
Dario R. Alessi
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
acs chemical biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.899
H-Index - 111
eISSN - 1554-8937
pISSN - 1554-8929
DOI - 10.1021/acschembio.8b01016
Subject(s) - endogeny , gene knockdown , cas9 , degradation (telecommunications) , ubiquitin , chemistry , crispr , protein degradation , conjugate , phosphorylation , microbiology and biotechnology , target protein , hek 293 cells , biochemistry , biology , apoptosis , receptor , gene , telecommunications , mathematical analysis , mathematics , computer science
Inducing post-translational protein knockdown is an important approach to probe biology and validate drug targets. An efficient strategy to achieve this involves expression of a protein of interest fused to an exogenous tag, allowing tag-directed chemical degraders to mediate protein ubiquitylation and proteasomal degradation. Here, we combine improved HaloPROTAC degrader probes with CRISPR/Cas9 genome editing technology to trigger rapid degradation of endogenous target proteins. Our optimized probe, HaloPROTAC-E, a chloroalkane conjugate of high-affinity VHL binder VH298, induced reversible degradation of two endosomally localized proteins, SGK3 and VPS34, with a DC 50 of 3-10 nM. HaloPROTAC-E induced rapid (∼50% degradation after 30 min) and complete ( D max of ∼95% at 48 h) depletion of Halo-tagged SGK3, blocking downstream phosphorylation of the SGK3 substrate NDRG1. HaloPROTAC-E more potently induced greater steady state degradation of Halo tagged endogenous VPS34 than the previously reported HaloPROTAC3 compound. Quantitative global proteomics revealed that HaloPROTAC-E is remarkably selective inducing only degradation of the Halo tagged endogenous VPS34 complex (VPS34, VPS15, Beclin1, and ATG14) and no other proteins were significantly degraded. This study exemplifies the combination of HaloPROTACs with CRISPR/Cas9 endogenous protein tagging as a useful method to induce rapid and reversible degradation of endogenous proteins to interrogate their function.
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