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Use of the dTAG system in vivo to degrade CDK2 and CDK5 in adult mice and explore potential safety liabilities

The degradation tag (dTAG) system for target protein degradation can remove proteins from biological systems without the drawbacks of some genetic methods, such as slow kinetics, lack of reversibility, low specificity, and the inability to titrate dosage. These drawbacks can make it difficult to com...

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Autores principales: Yenerall, Paul, Sung, Tae, Palyada, Kiran, Qian, Jessie, Arat, Seda, Kumpf, Steven W, Wang, Shih-Wen, Biddle, Kathleen, Esparza, Carlos, Chang, Stephanie, Scott, Wesley, Collette, Walter, Winrow, Taylor-Symon, Affolter, Tim, Shirai, Norimitsu, Thibault, Stephane, Wang, Julia, Liu, Ling, Bauchmann, Mary, Frey, Jessica, Steyn, Stefanus, Sacaan, Aida, Vitsky, Allison, Ahn, Youngwook, Paul, Tom, Lum, Lawrence, Oyer, Jon, Yang, Amy, Hu, Wenyue
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10306401/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37228089
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/toxsci/kfad049
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author Yenerall, Paul
Sung, Tae
Palyada, Kiran
Qian, Jessie
Arat, Seda
Kumpf, Steven W
Wang, Shih-Wen
Biddle, Kathleen
Esparza, Carlos
Chang, Stephanie
Scott, Wesley
Collette, Walter
Winrow, Taylor-Symon
Affolter, Tim
Shirai, Norimitsu
Thibault, Stephane
Wang, Julia
Liu, Ling
Bauchmann, Mary
Frey, Jessica
Steyn, Stefanus
Sacaan, Aida
Vitsky, Allison
Ahn, Youngwook
Paul, Tom
Lum, Lawrence
Oyer, Jon
Yang, Amy
Hu, Wenyue
author_facet Yenerall, Paul
Sung, Tae
Palyada, Kiran
Qian, Jessie
Arat, Seda
Kumpf, Steven W
Wang, Shih-Wen
Biddle, Kathleen
Esparza, Carlos
Chang, Stephanie
Scott, Wesley
Collette, Walter
Winrow, Taylor-Symon
Affolter, Tim
Shirai, Norimitsu
Thibault, Stephane
Wang, Julia
Liu, Ling
Bauchmann, Mary
Frey, Jessica
Steyn, Stefanus
Sacaan, Aida
Vitsky, Allison
Ahn, Youngwook
Paul, Tom
Lum, Lawrence
Oyer, Jon
Yang, Amy
Hu, Wenyue
author_sort Yenerall, Paul
collection PubMed
description The degradation tag (dTAG) system for target protein degradation can remove proteins from biological systems without the drawbacks of some genetic methods, such as slow kinetics, lack of reversibility, low specificity, and the inability to titrate dosage. These drawbacks can make it difficult to compare toxicity resulting from genetic and pharmacological interventions, especially in vivo. Because the dTAG system has not been studied extensively in vivo, we explored the use of this system to study the physiological sequalae resulting from CDK2 or CDK5 degradation in adult mice. Mice with homozygous knock-in of the dTAG sequence onto CDK2 and CDK5 were born at Mendelian ratios despite decreased CDK2 or CDK5 protein levels in comparison with wild-type mice. In bone marrow cells and duodenum organoids derived from these mice, treatment with the dTAG degrader dTAG-13 resulted in rapid and robust protein degradation but caused no appreciable change in viability or the transcriptome. Repeated delivery of dTAG-13 in vivo for toxicity studies proved challenging; we explored multiple formulations in an effort to maximize degradation while minimizing formulation-related toxicity. Degradation of CDK2 or CDK5 in all organs except the brain, where dTAG-13 likely did not cross the blood brain barrier, only caused microscopic changes in the testis of CDK2(dTAG) mice. These findings were corroborated with conditional CDK2 knockout in adult mice. Our results suggest that the dTAG system can provide robust protein degradation in vivo and that loss of CDK2 or CDK5 in adult mice causes no previously unknown phenotypes.
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spelling pubmed-103064012023-06-29 Use of the dTAG system in vivo to degrade CDK2 and CDK5 in adult mice and explore potential safety liabilities Yenerall, Paul Sung, Tae Palyada, Kiran Qian, Jessie Arat, Seda Kumpf, Steven W Wang, Shih-Wen Biddle, Kathleen Esparza, Carlos Chang, Stephanie Scott, Wesley Collette, Walter Winrow, Taylor-Symon Affolter, Tim Shirai, Norimitsu Thibault, Stephane Wang, Julia Liu, Ling Bauchmann, Mary Frey, Jessica Steyn, Stefanus Sacaan, Aida Vitsky, Allison Ahn, Youngwook Paul, Tom Lum, Lawrence Oyer, Jon Yang, Amy Hu, Wenyue Toxicol Sci Emerging Technologies, Methods, and Models The degradation tag (dTAG) system for target protein degradation can remove proteins from biological systems without the drawbacks of some genetic methods, such as slow kinetics, lack of reversibility, low specificity, and the inability to titrate dosage. These drawbacks can make it difficult to compare toxicity resulting from genetic and pharmacological interventions, especially in vivo. Because the dTAG system has not been studied extensively in vivo, we explored the use of this system to study the physiological sequalae resulting from CDK2 or CDK5 degradation in adult mice. Mice with homozygous knock-in of the dTAG sequence onto CDK2 and CDK5 were born at Mendelian ratios despite decreased CDK2 or CDK5 protein levels in comparison with wild-type mice. In bone marrow cells and duodenum organoids derived from these mice, treatment with the dTAG degrader dTAG-13 resulted in rapid and robust protein degradation but caused no appreciable change in viability or the transcriptome. Repeated delivery of dTAG-13 in vivo for toxicity studies proved challenging; we explored multiple formulations in an effort to maximize degradation while minimizing formulation-related toxicity. Degradation of CDK2 or CDK5 in all organs except the brain, where dTAG-13 likely did not cross the blood brain barrier, only caused microscopic changes in the testis of CDK2(dTAG) mice. These findings were corroborated with conditional CDK2 knockout in adult mice. Our results suggest that the dTAG system can provide robust protein degradation in vivo and that loss of CDK2 or CDK5 in adult mice causes no previously unknown phenotypes. Oxford University Press 2023-05-25 /pmc/articles/PMC10306401/ /pubmed/37228089 http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/toxsci/kfad049 Text en © The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society of Toxicology. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/), which permits non-commercial reproduction and distribution of the work, in any medium, provided the original work is not altered or transformed in any way, and that the work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com
spellingShingle Emerging Technologies, Methods, and Models
Yenerall, Paul
Sung, Tae
Palyada, Kiran
Qian, Jessie
Arat, Seda
Kumpf, Steven W
Wang, Shih-Wen
Biddle, Kathleen
Esparza, Carlos
Chang, Stephanie
Scott, Wesley
Collette, Walter
Winrow, Taylor-Symon
Affolter, Tim
Shirai, Norimitsu
Thibault, Stephane
Wang, Julia
Liu, Ling
Bauchmann, Mary
Frey, Jessica
Steyn, Stefanus
Sacaan, Aida
Vitsky, Allison
Ahn, Youngwook
Paul, Tom
Lum, Lawrence
Oyer, Jon
Yang, Amy
Hu, Wenyue
Use of the dTAG system in vivo to degrade CDK2 and CDK5 in adult mice and explore potential safety liabilities
title Use of the dTAG system in vivo to degrade CDK2 and CDK5 in adult mice and explore potential safety liabilities
title_full Use of the dTAG system in vivo to degrade CDK2 and CDK5 in adult mice and explore potential safety liabilities
title_fullStr Use of the dTAG system in vivo to degrade CDK2 and CDK5 in adult mice and explore potential safety liabilities
title_full_unstemmed Use of the dTAG system in vivo to degrade CDK2 and CDK5 in adult mice and explore potential safety liabilities
title_short Use of the dTAG system in vivo to degrade CDK2 and CDK5 in adult mice and explore potential safety liabilities
title_sort use of the dtag system in vivo to degrade cdk2 and cdk5 in adult mice and explore potential safety liabilities
topic Emerging Technologies, Methods, and Models
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10306401/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37228089
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/toxsci/kfad049
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