4.7 Article

PROTAC for agriculture: learning from human medicine to generate new biotechnological weed control solutions

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PEST MANAGEMENT SCIENCE
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JOHN WILEY & SONS LTD
DOI: 10.1002/ps.7741

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weeds; protac; resistance; herbicides; PEST; PESTICIDE

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Weed control has been heavily reliant on organic and inorganic molecules that target enzymes for almost a century. However, this approach has led to herbicide resistance. The development of new control tools in agriculture has been limited, with most efforts focused on developing transgenic crops with resistance to existing herbicides. The proteolysis-targeting chimera (PROTAC) technology, originally designed for treating human diseases, has potential applications in weed control by degrading various proteins and expanding the number of biochemical targets.
Weed control has relied on the use of organic and inorganic molecules that interfere with druggable targets, especially enzymes, for almost a century. This approach, although effective, has resulted in multiple cases of herbicide resistance. Furthermore, the rate of discovery of new druggable targets that are selective and with favorable environmental profiles has slowed down, highlighting the need for innovative control tools. The arrival of the biotechnology and genomics era gave hope to many that all sorts of new control tools would be developed. However, the reality is that most efforts have been limited to the development of transgenic crops with resistance to a few existing herbicides, which in fact is just another form of selectivity. Proteolysis-targeting chimera (PROTAC) is a new technology developed to treat human diseases but that has potential for multiple applications in agriculture. This technology uses a small bait molecule linked to an E3 ligand. The 3-dimensional structure of the bait favors physical interaction with a binding site in the target protein in a manner that allows E3 recruitment, ubiquitination and then proteasome-mediated degradation. This system makes it possible to circumvent the need to find druggable targets because it can degrade structural proteins, transporters, transcription factors, and enzymes without the need to interact with the active site. PROTAC can help control herbicide-resistant weeds as well as expand the number of biochemical targets that can be used for weed control. In the present article, we provide an overview of how PROTAC works and describe the possible applications for weed control as well as the challenges that this technology might face during development and implementation for field uses.

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