Publication | Open Access
Reprogramming of Protein-Targeted Small-Molecule Medicines to RNA by Ribonuclease Recruitment
106
Citations
34
References
2021
Year
Ribonuclease RecruitmentCanonical TargetEngineeringDrug TargetMolecular BiologyReceptor Tyrosine KinaseAntisense TherapyNovel TherapyCancer ResearchRna Structure PredictionRna BiologyMicrorna DetectionCell BiologyTumor MicroenvironmentRna FoldsBiomolecular EngineeringRational Drug DesignSmall RnaSystems BiologyMedicineSmall MoleculesDrug Discovery
Reprogramming known medicines for a novel target with activity and selectivity over the canonical target is challenging. By studying the binding interactions between RNA folds and known small-molecule medicines and mining the resultant dataset across human RNAs, we identified that Dovitinib, a receptor tyrosine kinase (RTK) inhibitor, binds the precursor to microRNA-21 (pre-miR-21). Dovitinib was rationally reprogrammed for pre-miR-21 by using it as an RNA recognition element in a chimeric compound that also recruits RNase L to induce the RNA's catalytic degradation. By enhancing the inherent RNA-targeting activity and decreasing potency against canonical RTK protein targets in cells, the chimera shifted selectivity for pre-miR-21 by 2500-fold, alleviating disease progression in mouse models of triple-negative breast cancer and Alport Syndrome, both caused by miR-21 overexpression. Thus, targeted degradation can dramatically improve selectivity even across different biomolecules, i.e., protein versus RNA.
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