Targeted protein degradation relies on small molecules
that induce
new protein–protein interactions between targets and the cellular
protein degradation machinery. Most of these small molecules feature
specific ligands for ubiquitin ligases. Recently, the attachment of
cysteine-reactive chemical groups to pre-existing small molecule inhibitors
has been shown to drive specific target degradation. We demonstrate
here that different cysteine-reactive groups can specify target degradation
via distinct ubiquitin ligases. By focusing on the bromodomain ligand
JQ1, we identify cysteine-reactive functional groups that drive BRD4
degradation by either DCAF16 or DCAF11. Unlike proteolysis-targeting
chimeric molecules (PROTACs), the new compounds use a single small
molecule ligand with a well-positioned cysteine-reactive group to
induce protein degradation. The finding that nearly identical compounds
can engage multiple ubiquitination pathways suggests that targeting
cellular pathways that search for and eliminate chemically reactive
proteins is a feasible avenue for converting existing small molecule
drugs into protein degrader molecules.