Ubiquitin-Induced Targeted Protein Degradation

Cambridge Healthtech Institute’s 4th Annual

Ubiquitin-Induced Targeted Protein Degradation

Optimizing PROTACs and Small Molecule Protein Degraders for Pursuing Undruggable Targets

May 18-19, 2021 | ALL TIMES EASTERN DAYLIGHT (UTC-04:00)

The ubiquitin-proteasome system (UPS) is a well-controlled, selective mechanism for intracellular protein degradation and turnover, and acts as a key regulator in cancer, CNS and many other diseases. Over the past few years, a new generation of inhibitors and activators have been developed for disrupting protein-protein interactions and for hijacking the UPS for protein degradation. Proteolysis-targeting chimeras (PROTACs), molecular glues, and other small molecules have triggered targeted protein degradation to seek out previously “undruggable” protein targets for drug discovery and therapeutic applications. However, challenges do exist in terms of specificity, stability, biodistribution and penetration of these molecules in vivo. The conference on Ubiquitin-Induced Targeted Protein Degradation will bring together experts to discuss the key issues underlying targeted protein degradation as a new approach for therapeutic intervention.

Tuesday, May 18

9:20 am LIVE: Greet ’n’ Go Welcome Gathering

DESIGNING & OPTIMIZING PROTEIN DEGRADERS

9:30 am

Targeted Protein Degradation – Where Are We Going?

Adam Gilbert, PhD, Senior Director, Discovery Sciences, Design & Synthesis Sciences, Pfizer Inc.

Overview of current state of targeted protein degradation and thoughts on where the field is heading with respect to clinical candidates, new degradation targets and different degradation strategies.

10:00 am

Pioneering the Future of Targeted Protein Degradation Therapeutics


Dan Sherman, Principal Investigator, Department of Medicinal Chemistry, Arvinas Inc.

A brief look at the Arvinas platform and pipeline.

10:30 am

TRKing Down an Old Oncogene in a New Era of Targeted Protein Degradation

Michael Plewe, PhD, Senior Vice President, Medicinal Chemistry, Cullgen Inc.

Our research focuses on leveraging our ubiquitin-mediated, small molecule-induced protein degradation technology (uSMITE) for the treatment of cancer and other diseases. I will present the discovery and evaluation of first-in-class potent and selective degraders of tropomyosin receptor kinases (TRK) that inhibited cell growth with low nanomolar IC50 values and demonstrated sustained tumor growth inhibition in xenografted tumor models using the oral administration route.

Ksenya Cohen Katsenelson, Senior Scientist Group Leader, Research & Development, Eurofins Discovery

Eurofins Discovery is diversifying its novel E3scan™ ligand-binding platform with additional E3 ligase target assays. Here, we present assay validation data for E3scan, including for E3 ligases that have not been utilized in targeted protein degradation and for which no small molecule ligands have been previously reported. Our E3scan platform enables accelerated screening and SAR analysis, with rapid turnaround times and the largest assay panel available on a single technology platform.

11:40 am LIVE:

Panel Q&A with Session Speakers

Panel Moderator:
Adam Gilbert, PhD, Senior Director, Discovery Sciences, Design & Synthesis Sciences, Pfizer Inc.
Panelists:
Dan Sherman, Principal Investigator, Department of Medicinal Chemistry, Arvinas Inc.
Michael Plewe, PhD, Senior Vice President, Medicinal Chemistry, Cullgen Inc.
Ksenya Cohen Katsenelson, Senior Scientist Group Leader, Research & Development, Eurofins Discovery

PLENARY KEYNOTE SESSION

12:00 pm

PLENARY: New Technologies for Drug Discovery

Bryan L. Roth, PhD, Distinguished Professor, Pharmacology & Psychiatry, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill

In this talk I will discuss recently invented approaches to accelerate drug discovery. These include a novel approach for directed evolution to create therapeutically targeted nanobodies, new biosensors for GPCRs and ultra-large-scale docking to discover new chemical matter at druggable targets. I will also highlight how these approaches can provide insights into new approaches to target COVID-19 and related disorders.

12:35 pm LIVE:

Q&A Plenary Discussion

Panel Moderator:
Phillip Schwartz, PhD, Principal Scientist, Biophysics, Frontier Medicines
Panelist:
Bryan L. Roth, PhD, Distinguished Professor, Pharmacology & Psychiatry, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
12:50 pm Session Break - View Our Virtual Exhibit Hall
1:00 pm Networking Hallway Hangout with Speakers and Poster Presenters - View Our Virtual Exhibit Hall

CHARACTERIZING MECHANISM OF ACTION

1:30 pm

Cyanopyrrolidine Inhibitors of USP7 Mediate Desulfhydration of the Active-Site Cysteine

Charlene Bashore, PhD, Principal Scientific Researcher, Genentech Inc.

We report covalent inhibitors of USP7 that unexpectedly promote a b-elimination reaction of the initial covalent adducts, thereby converting the active site cysteine residue to dehydroalanine. Unlike in conventional reversible-covalent inhibition, these compounds irreversibly destroy a catalytic residue whilst simultaneously converting the inhibitor to a non-electrophilic byproduct. This finding expands the scope of covalent inhibitor modalities and offers intriguing insights into enzyme-inhibitor dynamics in the ubiquitin-proteasome system and beyond.

Recommended Short Course*
SC1: Emerging Chemical Tools for Phenotypic Screening and Target Deconvolution

*All Access VIRTUAL Pricing or separate registration required. See short course page for details.

2:00 pm

Characterization of the Recruitment of Proteins to Ligases by Molecular Glues

Charles A. Wartchow, PhD, Associate Director, Global Discovery Chemistry, Novartis Institutes for BioMedical Research

Formation of ternary complexes between a ligase, a molecular glue, and a disease-modulating protein is the first step in a sequence of events leading to protein degradation. In this presentation, we present SPR methods for determining the affinities of the small molecule glue for the ligase and discuss methods for characterizing the affinities and kinetics of ternary complex formation involving the ligase, the molecular glue, and the recruited protein.

2:30 pm

Scalable Discovery and Streamlined Characterization of Novel Molecular Glue Degraders

Matthias Brand, PhD, Co-Founder and Vice President Biology, Proxygen GmBH

Molecular glue degraders are a novel therapeutic modality and induce destabilization of proteins that would otherwise be considered undruggable due to the lack of a ligandable pocket. Their discovery however has so far been serendipitous. The Proxygen glue degrader discovery platform enables rational screening for such molecules on an industrial scale. Here, we present a case study of the subsequent chemical optimization of the resulting hit molecules.

Steven Edenson, Strategic Collaborations Manager, Promega Corporation

As targeted protein degradation strategies expand, understanding the impacts of compound permeability, the kinetics of ternary complex formation, and ubiquitination are critical.  NanoBRET assays measure cellular compound permeability, the kinetics of complex formation and ubiquitination.  Using dBET1 and dBET6 PROTACs, we demonstrate that dBET6 is more permeable than dBET1.  Furthermore, dBET6 induces more complex formation and ubiquitination.  These results provide insight into the difference in degradation between dBET6 and dBET1. 

3:30 pm

 

 

Small-Molecule Induced Polymerization as Novel Mechanism for Protein Degradation Therapeutics

Eric Fischer, PhD, Assistant Professor & Principal Investigator, Biological Chemistry & Molecular Pharmacology, Dana Farber Cancer Institute

Small molecules that induce protein degradation through ligase-mediated ubiquitination, have shown considerable promise as a new pharmacological modality. Thalidomide and related IMiDs provided the clinical proof of concept, while significant progress has recently been made towards chemically induced targeted protein degradation using heterobifunctional small molecule ligands. We will present recent work towards a better understanding of the molecular principles that govern neo-substrate recruitment, and other small molecule degraders.

Dave Madge, Dr., Vice President, Research Service Division, Research Service Division, WuXi AppTec

This presentation will focus on the discovery and characterization of bifunctional molecules designed to leverage the ubiquitination pathway for degradation of a target protein. We will discuss strategies for the discovery of ligands for both the target protein and the ligase complex, determination of the kinetics of their interactions in binary and tertiary complexes, and the application of structural biology to design new ligands.

4:30 pm LIVE:

Panel Q&A with Session Speakers

Panel Moderator:
Charles A. Wartchow, PhD, Associate Director, Global Discovery Chemistry, Novartis Institutes for BioMedical Research
Panelists:
Eric Fischer, PhD, Assistant Professor & Principal Investigator, Biological Chemistry & Molecular Pharmacology, Dana Farber Cancer Institute
Charlene Bashore, PhD, Principal Scientific Researcher, Genentech Inc.
Matthias Brand, PhD, Co-Founder and Vice President Biology, Proxygen GmBH
Steven Edenson, Strategic Collaborations Manager, Promega Corporation
Dave Madge, Dr., Vice President, Research Service Division, Research Service Division, WuXi AppTec
4:30 pm Drug Discovery Chemistry Connects - View Our Virtual Exhibit Hall

Explore new products and services in our Exhibit Hall, engage with poster presenters, schedule 1-on-1 meetings, and build your research community during this open networking period.

5:00 pm Close of Day

Wednesday, May 19

9:30 am Interactive Breakout Discussions - View Our Virtual Exhibit Hall

This group discussion is a chance for everyone to see and hear each other if they choose to turn on their cameras and microphones. Each group will have a moderator to ensure focused conversations around key issues within the conference's scope. This will be a 'now or never' session; it will not be recorded or available On Demand. View all topics on breakouts webpage.

Topic: Designing and Optimizing Chemistry and Drug-Like Properties of Protein Degraders

Christopher Nasveschuk, PhD, Vice President, Chemistry, C4 Therapeutics, Inc.
Upendra Dahal, PhD, Principal Scientist, Pharmacokinetics and Drug Metabolism, Amgen, Inc.
  • Design of protein degraders, linkers
  • Kinetics of binding and degradation
  • Issues surrounding PK/PD, biotransformation and bioavailability​

CHASING NEW DEGRADATION TARGETS & PATHWAYS

10:00 am

PROTAC Drugs: Therapeutics, and Not Vaccines Will Overcome the SARS-CoV-2 Pandemic

Tauseef Butt, PhD, President & CEO, Progenra, Inc.

War against HIV was won by development of antiviral drugs. Successful HIV therapy involves combination of three drugs. Traditional mono-antiviral therapy has not been successful due to poor efficacy and emergence of resistance. Drugs that targeted viral protein for ubiquitin E3 ligase mediated degradation can eliminate the viral protein and prove to be highly efficacious. Progenra has targeted SARS-CoV-2 viral proteins with PROTAC drugs. Potent and selective PROTACs degrade viral proteins in cells and block viral growth. Discovery and development of PROTAC drugs that target SARS-CoV-2 will be discussed.

10:30 am

Degrading the Undruggable–Endogenous KRASG12C Degradation by VHL-MRTX849 PROTACs

Michael Bond, Graduate Student, Laboratory of Dr. Craig Crews, Department of Pharmacology, Yale University

The discovery of covalent inhibitors of KRASG12C has reinvigorated the field of KRAS drug discovery. While these compounds have shown promising clinic results, we wanted to explore PROTAC-mediated degradation as a complementary strategy to modulate KRASG12C.  We report the development of LC-2, the first PROTAC capable of degrading endogenous KRASG12C.  LC-2 induces rapid, sustained KRASG12C degradation and suppresses MAPK signaling. LC-2 demonstrates that PROTAC-mediated degradation can attenuate oncogenic KRAS levels.

11:00 am

Harnessing DNA-Encoded Libraries and Targeted Protein Degradation for the Discovery of New Therapeutics

Daniel Robbins, PhD, Senior Scientist, Medicinal Chemistry, Nurix Therapeutics Inc.

Targeted protein degradation is mediated by Chimeric Targeting Molecules (CTMs), which bind to a target protein and an E3 ligase, resulting in target protein ubiquitylation and proteasomal destruction. This presentation will describe Nurix’s DNA-encoded library (DEL) platform for the discovery of novel binders to enable CTM discovery. This presentation will also describe the discovery of orally bioavailable degraders of BTK, a clinically relevant target for oncology and immunology applications.

Matthew Clark, PhD, CEO, X-Chem Inc.

The application of DNA-encoded library (DEL) technology to the discovery of protein degraders is increasingly appreciated among researchers in the field. The nature of the DEL selection, the structure of libraries, and flexibility of the screening experiment, lend themselves to the degradation approach. In this presentation we will examine the current state of the art of DEL design and of selection methodologies, and their application to novel degrader discovery.

12:10 pm LIVE:

Panel Q&A with Session Speakers

Panel Moderator:
Tauseef Butt, PhD, President & CEO, Progenra, Inc.
Panelists:
Michael Bond, Graduate Student, Laboratory of Dr. Craig Crews, Department of Pharmacology, Yale University
Daniel Robbins, PhD, Senior Scientist, Medicinal Chemistry, Nurix Therapeutics Inc.
Matthew Clark, PhD, CEO, X-Chem Inc.
12:40 pm Women in Chemistry Breakout Discussion - View Our Virtual Exhibit Hall

CHI supports and promotes diversity in the life sciences. The inequities that prevent women from fully participating in this field may also deter men from participating more fully in life outside of their careers. We dedicate this session for all drug discovery community members to engage in conversation with one another around personal and professional journeys and challenges related to gender. View full info on breakouts webpage.

Women in Chemistry: The Gender Divide in Life Science Careers 

Moderator: Mary Harner, PhD, Senior Manager, Oncology CI, Bristol Myers Squibb Co.
1:10 pm Greet ’n’ Go Hallway Networker with Speakers and Poster Presenters - View Our Virtual Exhibit Hall
1:30 pm Close of Ubiquitin-Induced Targeted Protein Degradation Conference
Recommended Short Course*
SC2: Targeted Protein Degradation Using PROTACs, Molecular Glues, and More

*All Access VIRTUAL Pricing or separate registration required. See short course page for details.