1. Academic Validation
  2. MYC-Targeting PROTACs Lead to Bimodal Degradation and N-Terminal Truncation

MYC-Targeting PROTACs Lead to Bimodal Degradation and N-Terminal Truncation

  • ACS Chem Biol. 2025 Apr 18;20(4):896-906. doi: 10.1021/acschembio.4c00864.
Shelton R Boyd 1 Srinivas Chamakuri 2 Alexander J Trostle 3 4 Hu Chen 3 4 Zhandong Liu 3 4 Antrix Jian 1 Jian Wang 2 Anna Malovannaya 1 Damian W Young 1 2 4
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 Verna and Marrs McLean Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Pharmacology, Baylor College of Medicine, One Baylor Plaza, Houston, Texas 77030, United States.
  • 2 Center for Drug Discovery, Department of Pathology and Immunology, Baylor College of Medicine, One Baylor Plaza, Houston, Texas 77030, United States.
  • 3 Department of Pediatrics─Neurology, Baylor College of Medicine, One Baylor Plaza, Houston, Texas 77030, United States.
  • 4 Jan and Dan Duncan Neurological Research Institute, Texas Children's Hospital, Houston, Texas 77030, United States.
Abstract

MYC is a master regulatory transcription factor whose sustained dysregulation promotes the initiation and maintenance of numerous cancers. While MYC is a regarded as a potenial therapeutic target in Cancer, its intrinsically disordered structure has proven to be a formidable barrier toward the development of highly effective small molecule inhibitors. We rationalized that proteolysis targeting chimeras (PROTACs), which might accomplish the targeted degradation of MYC, would achieve more potent cell killing in MYC-driven Cancer cells than reversible inhibitors. PROTACs are bifunctional small molecules designed to produce a ternary complex between a target protein and an E3 Ligase leading the target's ubiquitination and degradation by the 26S Proteasome. We generated PROTAC MTP3 based on modifications of the previously reported MYC-targeting compound KJ-Pyr-9. We found that MTP3 depletes endogenous full-length MYC proteins and uniquely induces increasing levels of a functional, N-terminally truncated MYC species, tMYC. Furthermore, MTP3 perturbs cellular MYC levels in favor of a tMYC-dominated state whose gene regulatory landscape is not significantly altered compared to that of wild type MYC. Moreover, although it lacks ∼10 kDa of MYC's N-terminal transactivation domain, tMYC is sufficient to maintain an oncogenic proliferative state. Our results highlight the complexities of proximity-inducing compounds against highly regulated and conformationally dynamic protein targets such as MYC and indicate that PROTACs can induce alternative outcomes beyond target protein degradation.

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