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Query: UNIPROT:P42345 (
mTOR
)
26,049
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The macrolide antibiotic rapamycin inhibits the
mammalian target of rapamycin
protein (mTOR) kinase resulting in the global inhibition of cap-dependent protein synthesis, a blockade in ribosome component biosynthesis, and G1 cell cycle arrest. G1 arrest may occur by inhibiting the protein synthesis of critical factors required for cell cycle progression. Hypersensitivity to mTOR inhibitors has been demonstrated in cells having elevated levels of AKT kinase activity, whereas cells containing quiescent AKT activity are relatively resistant. Our previous data suggest that low AKT activity induces resistance by allowing continued cap-independent protein synthesis of cyclin D1 and c-Myc proteins. In support of this notion, the current study demonstrates that the human cyclin D1 mRNA 5' untranslated region contains an internal ribosome entry site (IRES) and that both this IRES and the c-myc IRES are negatively regulated by AKT activity. Furthermore, we show that cyclin D1 and c-myc IRES function is enhanced following exposure to rapamycin and requires both p38 MAPK and
RAF
/MEK/ERK signaling, as specific inhibitors of these pathways reduce IRES-mediated translation and protein levels under conditions of quiescent AKT activity. Thus, continued IRES-mediated translation initiation may permit cell cycle progression upon mTOR inactivation in cells in which AKT kinase activity is relatively low.
...
PMID:Cyclin D1 and c-myc internal ribosome entry site (IRES)-dependent translation is regulated by AKT activity and enhanced by rapamycin through a p38 MAPK- and ERK-dependent pathway. 1563 85
Protein kinases have emerged as one of the most promising targets for rational drug discovery. In a similar manner to imatinib mesylate (Gleevec), hematological malignancies offer multiple pharmacologic opportunities for manipulation of kinase-induced tumor cell proliferation. Certain kinases have been validated as targets for drug discovery in hematological malignancies (such as BCR-ABL and FLT3); other novel kinases hold considerable interest for targeted intervention: myeloid leukemias (KDR, KIT, CSF-1R, RAS and
RAF
), lymphoid leukemias (JAK2 fusion protein, TIE-1, CDK modulators), lymphoma (ALK, CDK modulators,
mTOR
), myeloproliferative disorders (PDGF-R or FGF-R fusion gene products, FGF-R1) and myeloma (FGF-R3, STAT3). Over the past five years, the number of kinase-targeted drug therapies undergoing clinical development has increased exponentially. This review will focus on novel kinase targets currently undergoing preclinical and clinical investigation.
...
PMID:Kinases as drug discovery targets in hematologic malignancies. 1630 89
Angiogenesis is a hallmark of melanoma progression. Antiangiogenic agents have been infrequently tested in patients with advanced melanoma. Experience with most other cancers suggests that single-agent application of angiogenic inhibitors is unlikely to have substantial clinical antitumor activity in melanoma. It is more likely that combinations of antiangiogenic agents with either chemotherapy or other targeted therapy will be needed to produce significant clinical benefit. In melanoma, numerous cellular pathways important to cell proliferation, apoptosis, or metastases have recently been shown to be activated. Activation occurs through specific mutations (B-RAF, N-RAS, and PTEN) or changes in expression levels of various proteins (PTEN, BCL-2, NF-kappaB, CDK2, and cyclin D1). Agents that block these pathways are rapidly entering the clinical setting, including
RAF
inhibitors (sorafenib), mitogen-activated protein kinase inhibitors (PD0325901),
mammalian target of rapamycin
inhibitors (CCI-779), and farnesyl transferase inhibitors (R115777) that inhibit N-RAS and proteasome inhibitors (PS-341) that block activation of nuclear factor-kappaB (NF-kappaB). It will be a challenge to evaluate these agents alone, in combination with each other, or with chemotherapy in patients with melanoma. Trials with large populations of biologically ill-defined tumors run the risk of missing clinical antitumor activity that is important for a particular yet-to-be-defined subset of patients. To rationally and optimally develop these targeted agents, it will be critical to adequately test for the presence of the presumed cellular target in tumor specimens and the effect of therapy on the proposed target (biological response). Investigators in this field will need to carefully plan these trials so that at the end of the day, we learn from both the failures and successes of targeted therapy.
...
PMID:Molecular targets in melanoma from angiogenesis to apoptosis. 1660 62
The oncogenic epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) pathway triggers downstream phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K)/RAS-mediated signaling cascades. In transgenic mice, glioblastoma cannot develop on single but only on simultaneous activation of the EGFR signaling mediators RAS and AKT. However, complete blockade of EGFR activation does not result in apoptosis in human glioblastoma cells, suggesting additional cross-talk between downstream pathways. Based on these observations, we investigated combination therapies using protein kinase inhibitors against EGFR, platelet-derived growth factor receptor, and
mammalian target of rapamycin
, assessing glioblastoma cell survival. Clinically relevant doses of AEE788, Gleevec (imatinib), and RAD001 (everolimus), alone or in combinations, did not induce glioblastoma cell apoptosis. In contrast, simultaneous inactivation of the EGFR downstream targets mitogen-activated protein/extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) kinase and PI3K by U0126 and wortmannin triggered rapid tumor cell death. Blocking EGFR with AEE788 in combination with sublethal concentrations of the microtubule stabilizer patupilone also induced apoptosis and reduced cell proliferation in glioblastoma cells, accompanied by reduced AKT and ERK activity. These data underline the critical role of the PI3K/AKT and the RAS/
RAF
/mitogen-activated protein/ERK kinase/ERK signaling cascades in the cell-intrinsic survival program of sensitive glioblastoma cell lines. We conclude that drug combinations, which down-regulate both ERK and protein kinase B/AKT activity, may prove effective in overcoming cell resistance in a subgroup of glioblastoma.
...
PMID:Combination of sublethal concentrations of epidermal growth factor receptor inhibitor and microtubule stabilizer induces apoptosis of glioblastoma cells. 1730 73
In an attempt to identify molecules that clearly reflect the oncogenic role of cell signaling pathways in human tumors, we propose a concept we term "funnel factor", a factor where several oncogenic signals converge and drive the proliferative signal downstream. In studies done in various tumor types, the expression of key cell signaling factors, including Her1 and Her2 growth factor receptors, as well as the RAS-
RAF
-mitogen-activated protein kinase and the phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase-AKT-
mammalian target of rapamycin
pathways was correlated with the associated clinicopathologic characteristics of these tumors. The downstream factors p70, S6, 4E-binding protein 1 (4E-BP1), and eukaryotic translation initiation factor 4E, which play a critical role in the control of protein synthesis, survival, and cell growth, were also analyzed. We found that phosphorylated 4E-BP1 (p-4E-BP1) expression in breast, ovary, and prostate tumors is associated with malignant progression and an adverse prognosis regardless of the upstream oncogenic alterations. Thus, p-4E-BP1 seems to act as a funnel factor for an essential oncogenic capability of tumor cells, self-sufficiency in growth signals, and could be a highly relevant molecular marker of malignant potential. Further investigation into this concept may identify additional funnel factors in the oncogenic pathways and provide potential therapeutic targets.
...
PMID:4E-binding protein 1: a key molecular "funnel factor" in human cancer with clinical implications. 1769 57
The RAS-
RAF
-MEK-ERK and PI3K-AKT-
mTOR
signaling pathways are activated through multiple mechanisms and appear to play a major role in melanoma progression. Herein, we examined whether targeting the RAS-
RAF
-MEK-ERK pathway with the
RAF
inhibitor sorafenib and/or the PI3K-AKT-
mTOR
pathway with the
mTOR
inhibitor rapamycin has therapeutic effects against melanoma. A combination of sorafenib (4 microM) with rapamycin (10 nM) potentiated growth inhibition in all six metastatic melanoma cell lines tested. The absolute enhancement of growth inhibition rates ranged from 13.0-27.8% in different cell lines (P<0.05, combination treatment vs monotreatment). Similar results were obtained with combinations of the MEK inhibitors U0126 (30 microM) or PD98059 (50 microM) with rapamycin (10 nM). The combined treatment of melanoma cells with sorafenib and rapamycin led to an approximately twofold increase of cell death compared with sorafenib monotreatment (P<0.05) as assessed by propidium iodide staining and cell death detection ELISA. Moreover, sorafenib in combination with rapamycin completely suppressed invasive melanoma growth in organotypic culture mimicking the physiological context. These effects were associated with complete downregulation of the antiapoptotic proteins Bcl-2 and Mcl-1. Sorafenib combined with rapamycin appears to be a promising strategy for the effective treatment of melanoma and merits clinical investigation.
...
PMID:Combined inhibition of MAPK and mTOR signaling inhibits growth, induces cell death, and abrogates invasive growth of melanoma cells. 1832 81
Patients with metastatic pancreatic cancer have poor prognosis and short survival due to lack of effective therapy and aggressiveness of the disease. Pancreatic cancer has widespread chromosomal instability, including a high rate of translocations and deletions. Upregulated EGF signaling and mutation of K-RAS are found in most pancreatic cancers. Therefore, inhibitors that target EGF receptor, K-RAS,
RAF
, MEK,
mTOR
, VEGF and PDGF, for example, have been evaluated in patients with pancreatic cancer. Although significant activities of these inhibitors have not been observed in the majority of pancreatic cancer patients, an enormous amount of experience and knowledge has been obtained from recent clinical trials. With a better inhibitor or combination of inhibitors, and improvement in the selection of patients for available inhibitors, better therapy for pancreatic cancer is on the horizon.
...
PMID:Biologic therapies for advanced pancreatic cancer. 1869 69
Gastrointestinal stromal tumours (GISTs) with deletions in KIT exon 11 are characterized by higher proliferation rates and shorter disease-free survival times, compared to GISTs with KIT exon 11 point mutations. Up-regulation of cyclin D is a crucial event for entry into the G1 phase of the cell cycle, and links mitogenic signalling to cell proliferation. Signalling from activated KIT to cyclin D is directed through the RAS/
RAF
/ERK, PI3K/AKT/
mTOR
/EIF4E, and JAK/STATs cascades. ERK and STATs initiate mRNA transcription of cyclin D, whereas EIF4E activation leads to increased translation efficiency and reduced degradation of cyclin D protein. The aim of the current study was to analyse the mRNA and protein expression as well as protein phosphorylation of central hubs of these signalling cascades in primary GISTs, to evaluate whether tumours with KIT exon 11 deletions and point mutations differently utilize these pathways. GISTs with KIT exon 11 deletions had significantly higher mitotic counts, higher proliferation rates, and shorter disease-free survival times. In line with this, they had significantly higher expression of cyclin D on the mRNA and protein level. Furthermore, there was a significantly higher amount of phosphorylated ERK1/2, and a higher protein amount of STAT3,
mTOR
, and EIF4E. PI3K and phosphorylated AKT were also up-regulated, but this was not significant. Ultimately, GISTs with KIT exon 11 deletions had significantly higher phosphorylation of the central negative cell-cycle regulator RB. Phosphorylation of RB is accomplished by activated cyclin D/CDK4/6 complex, and marks a central event in the release of the cell cycle. Altogether, these observations suggest increased KIT signalling with up-regulation of cyclin D as the basis for the unfavourable clinical course in GISTs with KIT exon 11 deletions.
...
PMID:Increased KIT signalling with up-regulation of cyclin D correlates to accelerated proliferation and shorter disease-free survival in gastrointestinal stromal tumours (GISTs) with KIT exon 11 deletions. 1872 75
Gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GISTs) generally arise from primary activating mutations in the KIT or PDGFRA genes that result in constitutive activation of receptor tyrosine kinase activity. Imatinib provides targeted therapy for GIST by inhibiting the KIT and PDGFR-alpha tyrosine kinases. Clinical benefit is achieved in approximately 85% of patients with unresectable or metastatic disease, with a median progression-free survival of 20 to 24 months. The mechanisms of acquired resistance to imatinib are heterogeneous, with most involving the emergence of secondary mutations in KIT exons 13, 14, or 17. In patients failing or intolerant to imatinib, the multitargeted agent sunitinib achieves durable disease control in approximately 50% of cases. Experimental treatment options beyond those currently available consist of other KIT-targeting tyrosine kinase inhibitors, such as nilotinib, or agents targeting alternative pathways, such as antiangiogenic agents,
mammalian target of rapamycin
,
RAF
kinase, and chaperone inhibitors.
...
PMID:Novel approaches to imatinib- and sunitinib-resistant GIST. 1877 61
In melanoma, the PI3K-AKT-
mTOR
(AKT) and
RAF
-MEK-ERK (MAPK) signaling pathways are constitutively activated and appear to play a role in chemoresistance. Herein, we investigated the effects of pharmacological AKT and MAPK pathway inhibitors on chemosensitivity of melanoma cells to cisplatin and temozolomide. Chemosensitivity was tested by examining effects on growth, cell cycle, survival, expression of antiapoptotic proteins, and invasive tumor growth of melanoma cells in monolayer and organotypic culture, respectively. MAPK pathway inhibitors did not significantly increase chemosensitivity. AKT pathway inhibitors consistently enhanced chemosensitivity yielding an absolute increase of cell growth inhibition up to 60% (P<0.05, combination therapy vs monotherapy with inhibitors or chemotherapeutics). Cotreatment of melanoma cells with AKT pathway inhibitors and chemotherapeutics led to a 2- to 3-fold increase of apoptosis (P<0.05, combination therapy vs monotherapy) and completely suppressed invasive tumor growth in organotypic culture. These effects were associated with suppression of the antiapoptotic Bcl-2 family protein Mcl-1. These data suggest that inhibition of the PI3K-AKT-
mTOR
pathway potently increases sensitivity of melanoma cells to chemotherapy.
...
PMID:Inhibition of PI3K-AKT-mTOR signaling sensitizes melanoma cells to cisplatin and temozolomide. 1907 92
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