1. Academic Validation
  2. Integrated computational screen and validation of thalidomide-based PROTACs targeting SARS-CoV-2 main protease

Integrated computational screen and validation of thalidomide-based PROTACs targeting SARS-CoV-2 main protease

  • RSC Med Chem. 2026 Jan 13. doi: 10.1039/d5md01003a.
Li-Na Guo 1 Yu-Hua Li 1 Rou-Yu Zhu 2 Ni Su 2 Zhi-Yu Shao 2 Hua Diao 1
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 NHC Key Lab of Reproduction Regulation, Shanghai Engineering Research Center of Reproductive Health Drug and Devices, Shanghai-MOST Key Laboratory of Health and Disease Genomics, Shanghai Institute for Biomedical and Pharmaceutical Technologies Shanghai 200237 China guoln90@126.com li_yuhua@163.com diaohua@sibpt.cn.
  • 2 College of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Donghua University Shanghai 201620 China chinofield@163.com 1774507481@qq.com zyshao@dhu.edu.cn.
Abstract

The persistent evolution of SARS-CoV-2 underscores the need for Antiviral strategies. The viral main protease (Mpro) represents a conspicuous target due to its essential role in viral replication and high conservation across SARS-CoV-2. Conventional Mpro inhibitors face challenges such as drug resistance and toxicity. Proteolysis-targeting chimeras (PROTACs) offer an event-driven mechanism to degrade rather than inhibit the target protein, overcoming key limitations of occupancy-driven pharmacology. Here, we designed a series of thalidomide-based PROTACs targeting SARS-CoV-2 Mpro and explored their effectiveness through computational simulations and experimental validation. Molecular docking revealed that PROTACs A, B, and C exhibit favorable binding free energies (ΔG < -8.0 kcal mol-1). These findings were further supported by molecular dynamics simulations, which demonstrated consistently stable binding over 10 ns, with backbone RMSD values maintained within the range of 0.18-0.30 Å. Cell experiments indicated that PROTACs A, B, and C effectively induced dose-dependent Mpro degradation in HEK293 stable cells, with DC50 values ranging from 0.530 to 0.985 μM and exhibited high selectivity indices (CC50/DC50 > 10). Mechanistically, PROTACs-induced degradation of Mpro via the ubiquitin-proteasome system was evidenced by enhanced K48-linked polyubiquitination and suppression of degradation upon Proteasome inhibition. The PROTACs (A, B and C) exhibit comparable effects and share similar mechanisms in degrading Mpro. Our work develops effective degraders targeting SARS-CoV-2 Mpro and highlights the therapeutic potential of PROTACs in combating drug-resistant viral targets via a catalytic degradation mechanism.

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