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Potent and selective inhibitors of Akt kinases slow the progress of tumors in vivo

Authors :
Amanda K Mika
Eric F. Johnson
Joel D. Leverson
Keith W. Woods
Michael J. Mitten
Jennifer J. Bouska
Xuesong Liu
Bradley A. Zinker
Thomas McGonigal
Richard A. Smith
Saul H. Rosenberg
Tongmei Li
Mulugeta Mamo
Anatol Oleksijew
Ron De Jong
Tilman Oltersdorf
Vincent S. Stoll
Emily E. Gramling-Evans
Alexander R. Shoemaker
Yan Luo
Vered Klinghofer
Phong T. Nguyen
Jessica A. Powlas
Sheela A. Thomas
Yan Shi
Qun Li
Ran Guan
Edward K. Han
Vincent L. Giranda
Source :
Molecular Cancer Therapeutics. 4:977-986
Publication Year :
2005
Publisher :
American Association for Cancer Research (AACR), 2005.

Abstract

The Akt kinases are central nodes in signal transduction pathways that are important for cellular transformation and tumor progression. We report the development of a series of potent and selective indazole-pyridine based Akt inhibitors. These compounds, exemplified by A-443654 (Ki = 160 pmol/L versus Akt1), inhibit Akt-dependent signal transduction in cells and in vivo in a dose-responsive manner. In vivo, the Akt inhibitors slow the progression of tumors when used as monotherapy or in combination with paclitaxel or rapamycin. Tumor growth inhibition was observed during the dosing interval, and the tumors regrew when compound administration was ceased. The therapeutic window for these compounds is narrow. Efficacy is achieved at doses ∼2-fold lower than the maximally tolerated doses. Consistent with data from knockout animals, the Akt inhibitors induce an increase in insulin secretion. They also induce a reactive increase in Akt phosphorylation. Other toxicities observed, including malaise and weight loss, are consistent with abnormalities in glucose metabolism. These data show that direct Akt inhibition may be useful in cancer therapy, but significant metabolic toxicities are likely dose limiting.

Details

ISSN :
15388514 and 15357163
Volume :
4
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Molecular Cancer Therapeutics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....866d5278df0df0bd19eadac6f0cf0de2
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1158/1535-7163.mct-05-0005