Abstract

Membrane proteins are a crucial class of therapeutic targets that remain challenging to modulate using traditional occupancy-driven inhibition strategies or current proteolysis-targeting degradation approaches. Here, we report that the inherent endolysosomal sorting machinery can be harnessed for the targeted degradation of membrane proteins. A new degradation technique, termed signal-mediated lysosome-targeting chimeras (SignalTACs), was developed by genetically fusing the signaling motif from the cation-independent mannose-6-phosphate receptor (CI-M6PR) to a membrane protein binder. Antibody-based SignalTACs were constructed with the CI-M6PR signal peptides fused to the C-terminus of both heavy and light chains of IgG. We demonstrated the scope of this platform technology by degrading five pathogenesis-related membrane proteins, including HER2, EGFR, PD-L1, CD20, and CD71. Furthermore, two simplified constructs of SignalTACs, nanobody-based and peptide-based SignalTACs, were created and shown to promote the lysosomal degradation of target membrane proteins. Compared to the parent antibodies, SignalTACs exhibited significantly higher efficiency in inhibiting tumor cell growth both in vitro and in vivo. This work provides a simple, general, and robust strategy for degrading membrane proteins with molecular precision and may represent a powerful platform with broad research and therapeutic applications.

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