Targeted Degradation of CDK9 Potently Disrupts the MYC Transcriptional Network

Mohammed A. Toure, Keisuke Motoyama, Yichen Xiang, Julie Urgiles,Florian Kabinger, Ann-Sophie Koglin, Ramya S. Iyer, Kaitlyn Gagnon, Amruth Kumar,Samuel Ojeda, Drew A. Harrison,Matthew G. Rees,Jennifer A. Roth, Christopher J. Ott, Richard Schiavoni,Charles A. Whittaker,Stuart S. Levine,Forest M. White,Eliezer Calo,Andre Richters,Angela N. Koehler

biorxiv(2024)

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Abstract
Cyclin-dependent kinase 9 (CDK9) coordinates signaling events that regulate RNA polymerase II (Pol II) pause-release states. It is an important co-factor for transcription factors, such as MYC, that drive aberrant cell proliferation when their expression is deregulated. CDK9 modulation offers an approach for attenuating dysregulation in such transcriptional programs. As a result, numerous drug development campaigns to inhibit CDK9 kinase activity have been pursued. More recently, targeted degradation has emerged as an attractive approach. However, comprehensive evaluation of degradation versus inhibition is still critically needed to assess the biological contexts in which degradation might offer superior therapeutic benefits. We validated that CDK9 inhibition triggers a compensatory mechanism that dampens its effect on MYC expression and found that this feedback mechanism was absent when the kinase is degraded. Importantly, CDK9 degradation is more effective than its inhibition for disrupting MYC transcriptional regulatory circuitry likely through the abrogation of both enzymatic and scaffolding functions of CDK9. Highlights ### Competing Interest Statement A.N.K is a scientific co-founder, scientific advisory board member, and equity holder in Kronos Bio.
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