Developing Covalent Protein Drugs via Proximity-Enabled Reactive Therapeutics
Author(s) -
Qingke Li,
Chen Qu,
Paul C. Klauser,
Mengyuan Li,
Feng Zheng,
Nanxi Wang,
M Kellis,
Qianbing Zhang,
Xuemei Fu,
Qian Wang,
Yang Xu,
Lei Wang
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
cell
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 26.304
H-Index - 776
eISSN - 1097-4172
pISSN - 0092-8674
DOI - 10.1016/j.cell.2020.05.028
Subject(s) - covalent bond , small molecule , histidine , biology , in vivo , biochemistry , plasma protein binding , protein–protein interaction , non covalent interactions , in vitro , combinatorial chemistry , amino acid , pharmacology , biophysics , chemistry , molecule , genetics , hydrogen bond , organic chemistry
Small molecule covalent drugs provide desirable therapeutic properties over noncovalent ones for treating challenging diseases. The potential of covalent protein drugs, however, remains unexplored due to protein's inability to bind targets covalently. We report a proximity-enabled reactive therapeutics (PERx) approach to generate covalent protein drugs. Through genetic code expansion, a latent bioreactive amino acid fluorosulfate-L-tyrosine (FSY) was incorporated into human programmed cell death protein-1 (PD-1). Only when PD-1 interacts with PD-L1 did the FSY react with a proximal histidine of PD-L1 selectively, enabling irreversible binding of PD-1 to only PD-L1 in vitro and in vivo. When administrated in immune-humanized mice, the covalent PD-1(FSY) exhibited strikingly more potent antitumor effect over the noncovalent wild-type PD-1, attaining therapeutic efficacy equivalent or superior to anti-PD-L1 antibody. PERx should provide a general platform technology for converting various interacting proteins into covalent binders, achieving specific covalent protein targeting for biological studies and therapeutic capability unattainable with conventional noncovalent protein drugs.
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