Cells monitor and recycle their proteins through a tightly regulated waste-disposal system. Proteins that are no longer needed are tagged and broken down by specialized cellular machinery. Recent advances in drug discovery seek to exploit this system by redirecting it toward disease-relevant targets.
One strategy relies on molecular glues—small molecules that induce interactions between proteins that would not normally bind to each other. If a disease-causing protein can be brought into contact with a cellular degradation enzyme, it is selectively eliminated by the cell itself.
A new method took a systematic approach to the discovery of new molecular glues: starting from a small molecule that already binds to a target protein, researchers generated thousands of chemical variants by systematically attaching different molecular building blocks. Each variant subtly reshapes the surface of the protein, potentially enabling new protein–protein interactions.
The compounds were screened directly in living cells, without prior purification, using a sensitive assay that reports whether the target protein is being degraded. This enabled rapid identification of active compounds from a vast chemical space.
This work is published in Nature Chemical Biology in the paper, “High-throughput ligand diversification to discover chemical inducers of proximity.”
“Our approach combines high-throughput chemistry with functional testing in cells,” says Miquel Muñoz i Ordoño, a PhD student in the lab of Georg Winter, scientific director at the AITHYRA Research Institute for Biomedical Artificial Intelligence and adjunct principal investigator at the CeMM Research Center for Molecular Medicine in Vienna, Austria. “This allows us to explore chemical diversity at a scale that was previously impractical, while immediately seeing which compounds have a desired biological effect.”
The researchers focused on ENL, a protein that plays a central role in certain forms of acute leukemia. From several thousand tested compounds, the team identified a molecule that efficiently and selectively triggers degradation of ENL in leukemia cells. Further analyses showed that the compound primarily affects ENL and downstream gene programs controlled by this protein, leading to a strong reduction in the growth of ENL-dependent leukemia cells. They also revealed that the compound acts through a cooperative mechanism characteristic of molecular glues. Rather than binding strongly to all interaction partners, it first binds ENL and then creates a new interaction surface that recruits a cellular ubiquitin ligase, which marks ENL for degradation.
“This cooperative mode of action is what makes molecular glues both powerful and selective,” explains Winter. “The compound only becomes active in the right molecular context, which helps limit unwanted effects.”
Beyond the specific example of ENL, the study demonstrates a broadly applicable discovery strategy. By combining high-throughput chemistry with functional screening in cells, the researchers show how the identification of molecular glues can be transformed from a serendipitous process into a systematic workflow.
“Our goal is to make proximity-inducing drugs discoverable in a rational and scalable way,” says Winter. “In the long term, this could open up entirely new therapeutic opportunities for proteins that were previously considered undruggable.”
