作者
Jonathan Mannion,Valentina Gifford,Benjamin R. Bellenie,Winnie Fernando,Laura Ramos Garcia,Rebecca Wilson,Sidonie Wicky John,Savita Udainiya,Emmanuel C. Patin,Crescens Tiu,Ángel Smith,Maria Goicoechea,Andrew Craxton,Nathalia Moraes de Vasconcelos,Naomi Guppy,Kwai-Ming J. Cheung,Nicholas J. Cundy,Olivier A. Pierrat,Alfie Brennan,Theodoros I. Roumeliotis,Graeme Benstead-Hume,John Alexander,Gareth Muirhead,Scott Layzell,Wenxin Lyu,Victoria Roulstone,Mark Allen,Holly Baldock,Arnaud J. Legrand,Florian Gabel,Natalia Serrano-Aparicio,Chris Starling,Hongyan Guo,Jason W. Upton,Mads Gyrd‐Hansen,Marion MacFarlane,Benedict Seddon,Florence I. Raynaud,Ioannis Roxanis,Kevin J. Harrington,Syed Haider,Jyoti S. Choudhary,Swen Hoelder,Tencho Tenev,Pascal Meier
摘要
Receptor-interacting serine/threonine-protein kinase 1 (RIPK1) functions as a critical stress sentinel that coordinates cell survival, inflammation, and immunogenic cell death (ICD). Although the catalytic function of RIPK1 is required to trigger cell death, its non-catalytic scaffold function mediates strong pro-survival signaling. Accordingly, cancer cells can hijack RIPK1 to block necroptosis and evade immune detection. We generated a small-molecule proteolysis-targeting chimera (PROTAC) that selectively degraded human and murine RIPK1. PROTAC-mediated depletion of RIPK1 deregulated TNFR1 and TLR3/4 signaling hubs, accentuating the output of NF-κB, MAPK, and IFN signaling. Additionally, RIPK1 degradation simultaneously promoted RIPK3 activation and necroptosis induction. We further demonstrated that RIPK1 degradation enhanced the immunostimulatory effects of radio- and immunotherapy by sensitizing cancer cells to treatment-induced TNF and interferons. This promoted ICD, antitumor immunity, and durable treatment responses. Consequently, targeting RIPK1 by PROTACs emerges as a promising approach to overcome radio- or immunotherapy resistance and enhance anticancer therapies.