article thumbnail

Attacking Cancers Using Novel Methods of Targeted Protein Degradation

SugarCone Biotech

It is important to be clear that this is a unique degrader strategy and not at all like ProTAC or ProMAB technologies that targets proteins by binding them to the E3-ligase controlled degradation pathway. That is a complex field that has struggled to bring therapies to approval (see [link] ).

article thumbnail

Degrader Radar, Apr. ’23: DCAF1, on CNS Degraders, and More

Drug Hunter

This article highlights six recent articles of interest in the field of targeted protein degradation including but not limited to potentially new ligases, recruiting motifs, and a discussion on the feasibility of CNS-penetrant degraders.

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

Oncology Market Outlook 2024

Fierce BioTech

It addresses CAR-T therapies, KRAS, radiopharmaceuticals, & targeted protein degradation. It addresses CAR-T therapies, KRAS, radiopharmaceuticals, & targeted protein degradation. Blue Matter Consulting Resource Type Whitepaper BlueMatterConsulting_250x190 (1) (2).png

article thumbnail

Covalent PROTAC design method based on a sulfonyl pyridone probe

Covalent Modifiers

This approach showcases the potential of nucleophilic amino acid labeling probes, particularly for proteins lacking easily accessible cysteine residues, opening new possibilities for covalent PROTAC design and targeted protein degradation therapies.

article thumbnail

Patent Highlights: Allosteric AR Modulators, Glycogen Synthase Inhibitors, and More

Drug Hunter

This edition includes Maze’s glycogen synthase 1 (GYS1) inhibitors that were recently licensed to Sanofi, allosteric androgen receptor (AR) modulators that may be of interest to targeted protein degradation researchers, and brain-penetrant HER2 and ROCK2 inhibitors.

article thumbnail

SMR Meeting: Molecular Glues

Zobio

In person Molecular glues and targeted protein degraders are changing the landscape of drug discovery. They show great potential for treating diseases such as cancer, infectious, inflammatory, andneurodegenerative diseases, especially for those with “undruggable” pathogenic protein targets.

article thumbnail

SMR Meeting: Molecular Glues

Zobio

In person Molecular glues and targeted protein degraders are changing the landscape of drug discovery. They show great potential for treating diseases such as cancer, infectious, inflammatory, andneurodegenerative diseases, especially for those with “undruggable” pathogenic protein targets.