Experimental and Molecular Therapeutics | 2021

Abstract 1348: Targeted degradation of PARP14 Using a heterobifunctional small molecule

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


PARP14 is an interferon-stimulated gene that is overexpressed in multiple tumor types and has been shown to promote the pro-tumor M2 polarization of macrophages and support Th2/Th17 signaling in models of allergic airway disease. PARP14 is a large 203 kDa protein that possesses a catalytic domain responsible for the transfer of mono-ADP-ribose to its substrates, three macrodomains that bind mono-ADP-ribose, a WWE domain that serves as a binding module for poly-ADP-ribose, and an RNA recognition motif. We have previously shown that the potent and reversible enzymatic inhibitor, RBN012759 (IC50 1,000-fold selective over polyPARPs), links PARP14 catalytic inhibition with suppression of the antitumor immune response in human primary macrophages and human kidney cancer explants. While this catalytic inhibitor of PARP14 was able to suppress IL-4-driven pro-tumor gene expression in macrophages, it is unknown what roles the non-enzymatic biomolecular recognition motifs play in the biological function of PARP14. To further understand this, we describe a heterobifunctional small molecule, RBN012811, based on a catalytic inhibitor of PARP14 that binds in the enzyme9s NAD+-binding site and recruits the E3 ligase cereblon to ubiquitinate PARP14 and selectively target it for degradation. RBN012811 has a IC50 of 0.01 μM against PARP14 in a biophysical assay and is at least 200-fold selective over all other PARPs. In KYSE-270 cancer cells, RBN012811 has a half-maximal degradation concentration (DC50) of 0.005 μM and it does not cause degradation of other PARP enzymes. In human primary macrophages PARP14 degradation by RBN012811 led to a dose-dependent decrease of IL-10 release induced by IL-4 stimulation. Our data demonstrates that RBN012811 is a useful tool to enable further exploration of the role of PARP14 in inflammation and cancer. Citation Format: Tim Wigle, Yue Ren, Jennifer Molina, Danielle Blackwell, Laurie Schenkel, Kerren Swinger, Anne Cheug, Ryan Abo, Elena Minissale, Alvin Lu, Christina Majer, William Church, Bryan Dorsey, Mario Niepel, Nicholas Perl, Kristy Kuplast-Barr, Kristen McEachern, Melissa Vasbinder, Heike Keilhack, Kevin Kuntz. Targeted degradation of PARP14 Using a heterobifunctional small molecule [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting 2021; 2021 Apr 10-15 and May 17-21. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2021;81(13_Suppl):Abstract nr 1348.

Volume None
Pages None
DOI 10.1158/1538-7445.AM2021-1348
Language English
Journal Experimental and Molecular Therapeutics

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