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Aberrant AKT activation drives well-differentiated liposarcoma

Authors :
Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer Research at MIT
Snyder, Eric
Gutierrez, Alejandro
Marino-Enriquez, Adrian
Zhang, Yi-Xiang
Sioletic, Stefano
Kozakewich, Elena
Grebliunaite, Ruta
Ou, Wen-bin
Sicinska, Ewa
Raut, Chandrajit P.
Demetri, George D.
Perez-Atayde, Antonio R.
Wagner, Andrew J.
Fletcher, Jonathan A.
Fletcher, Christopher D. M.
Look, A. Thomas
Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer Research at MIT
Snyder, Eric
Gutierrez, Alejandro
Marino-Enriquez, Adrian
Zhang, Yi-Xiang
Sioletic, Stefano
Kozakewich, Elena
Grebliunaite, Ruta
Ou, Wen-bin
Sicinska, Ewa
Raut, Chandrajit P.
Demetri, George D.
Perez-Atayde, Antonio R.
Wagner, Andrew J.
Fletcher, Jonathan A.
Fletcher, Christopher D. M.
Look, A. Thomas
Source :
PNAS
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

This article contains supporting information online at www.pnas.org/lookup/suppl/doi:10. 1073/pnas.1106127108/-/DCSupplemental.<br />Well-differentiated liposarcoma (WDLPS), one of the most common human sarcomas, is poorly responsive to radiation and chemotherapy, and the lack of animal models suitable for experimental analysis has seriously impeded functional investigation of its pathobiology and development of effective targeted therapies. Here, we show that zebrafish expressing constitutively active Akt2 in mesenchymal progenitors develop WDLPS that closely resembles the human disease. Tumor incidence rates were 8% in p53 wild-type zebrafish, 6% in p53 heterozygotes, and 29% in p53-homozygous mutant zebrafish (P = 0.013), indicating that aberrant Akt activation collaborates with p53 mutation in WDLPS pathogenesis. Analysis of primary clinical specimens of WDLPS, and of the closely related dedifferentiated liposarcoma (DDLPS) subtype, revealed immunohistochemical evidence of AKT activation in 27% of cases. Western blot analysis of a panel of cell lines derived from patients with WDLPS or DDLPS revealed robust AKT phosphorylation in all cell lines examined, even when these cells were cultured in serum-free media. Moreover, BEZ235, a small molecule inhibitor of PI3K and mammalian target of rapamycin that effectively inhibits AKT activation in these cells, impaired viability at nanomolar concentrations. Our findings are unique in providing an animal model to decipher the molecular pathogenesis of WDLPS, and implicate AKT as a previously unexplored therapeutic target in this chemoresistant sarcoma.<br />Ludwig Center at Dana-Farber/Harvard Cancer Center and Harvard Medical School<br />Harvard Catalyst<br />National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (Award UL1 RR 025758)<br />Harvard University<br />National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (Grant 1K08CA133103)<br />Fundación Alfonso Martín Escudero

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
PNAS
Notes :
application/pdf, en_US
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1141881202
Document Type :
Electronic Resource