Multiplex design and discovery of proximity handles for programmable proteome editing
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Although we now have a rich toolset for genome editing, an equivalent framework for manipulating the proteome with a comparable flexibility and specificity remains elusive. A promising strategy for “proteome editing” is to use bifunctional molecules ( e.g. PROteolysis-Targeting Chimeras or PROTACs 1 ) that bring a target protein into proximity with a degradation or stabilization effector, but their broader application is constrained by a limited repertoire of well-characterized target or effector “handles”. We asked whether coupling de novo protein design to a multiplex screening framework could address this gap by accelerating the discovery of effector handles for intracellular protein degradation, stabilization, or relocalization. Using LABEL-seq 2 , a sequencing-based assay that enables multiplex, quantitative measurement of protein abundance, we screened 9,715 de novo designed candidate effector handles for their ability to recruit a target protein to components of the ubiquitin–proteasome system 3 (UPS) (FBXL12, TRAF2, UCHL1, USP38) or the autophagy pathway 4 (GABARAP, GABARAPL2, MAP1LC3A). In a single experiment, we discovered hundreds of de novo designed effector handles that reproducibly drove either intracellular degradation (n = 277) or stabilization (n = 204) of a reporter protein. Validation of a subset of these hits in an orthogonal assay confirmed that sequencing-based measurements from the primary screen reliably reflected changes in intracellular abundance of the target protein. Successful effector handles were discovered for both the UPS (n = 194) and autophagy (n = 287) pathways, which provide complementary routes for programmable proteome editing. Autophagy-recruiting effector handles generalized to endogenous targets, as substituting the reporter-specific target handle with a high-affinity MCL1 binder 5 reduced endogenous levels of this intracellular oncoprotein 6 . Moreover, directing autophagy-recruiting effector handles to the outer mitochondrial membrane dramatically perturbed mitochondrial networks in a manner consistent with synthetic tethering and sequestration 7,8 . Beyond generating a diverse repertoire of protein abundance or localization effector handles, our results establish a scalable, low-cost platform that links deep learning–guided protein design to functional cellular readouts, and chart a course toward a general framework for programmable proteome editing.