Induced ubiquitination bypasses canonical ERAD to drive ER protein degradation

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Abstract

Heterobifunctional proteolysis-targeting chimeras (PROTACs) have emerged as a powerful strategy to degrade disease-relevant proteins, enabling targeting of previously “undruggable” proteins. Current degrader molecules primarily target cytosolic substrates, yet nearly one-third of the proteome resides in or transits the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), including receptors, secreted factors, and biosynthetic enzymes with high therapeutic relevance. Whether ER-localized proteins can be broadly targeted for induced degradation remains an open question. To address this gap, we employed a panel of fluorescent reporter cell lines and used the dTAG chemical-genetic system to recruit cytosolic E3 ligases. While lumenal substrates segregated from the cytosol were resistant to degradation, recruitment of cytosolic ligases effectively degraded ER membrane proteins across multiple topologies and with post-translational modifications. CRISPR genetic screens revealed that the induced degradation required the expected cullin RING ligase complexes but surprisingly bypassed ER-associated degradation (ERAD) machinery, with the exception of the AAA ATPase VCP. Mechanistic studies demonstrated that substrate ubiquitination was essential for VCP binding, and cleavage of ubiquitin chains released VCP, suggesting a model in which VCP directly extracts substrates independent of a dislocation apparatus. Extending this strategy to an endogenous substrate, we synthesized an HMGCR ERAD-TAC by linking atorvastatin to a cereblon E3 ligase recruiter and found that HMGCR degradation was likewise VCP-dependent. Together, these findings demonstrate that ER membrane proteins are generally susceptible to induced degradation via cytosolic ligase recruitment, uncovering a VCP-centered mechanism that operates independently of membrane-embedded ERAD machinery. This work establishes foundational principles for extending targeted protein degradation to the early secretory pathway.

SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT

Targeted protein degradation has transformed drug discovery. Nearly one-third of the proteome reside in or transit the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), a compartment rich in therapeutically relevant but structurally complex targets. Whether these ER proteins can be broadly degraded using PROTACs has remained unknown. Here, we define the minimal requirements for degrading ER membrane proteins by recruiting cytosolic E3 ligases. Using chemical-genetic tools, genetic screens, and a statin-based degrader, we show that ubiquitination engages the VCP extraction machinery, enabling degradation of diverse ER membrane proteins independent of canonical ER-associated degradation components. These findings reveal a ubiquitin-driven route for membrane protein turnover, expand the landscape of druggable ER proteins, and establish principles for designing degraders operating in the early secretory pathway.

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