Brain Cancer Stem Cells Display Preferential Sensitivity to Akt Inhibition
Open Access
- 18 September 2008
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in The International Journal of Cell Cloning
- Vol. 26 (12), 3027-3036
- https://doi.org/10.1634/stemcells.2007-1073
Abstract
Malignant brain tumors are among the most lethal cancers, and conventional therapies are largely limited to palliation. Novel therapies targeted against specific molecular pathways may offer superior efficacy and less toxicity than conventional therapies, but initial clinical trials of molecular targeted agents in brain cancer therapy have been frequently disappointing. In brain tumors and other cancers, subpopulations of tumor cells have recently been characterized by their ability to self-renew and initiate tumors. Although these cancer stem cells, or tumor initiating cells, are often only present in small numbers in human tumors, mounting evidence suggests that cancer stem cells contribute to tumor maintenance and therapeutic resistance. Thus, the development of therapies that target cancer stem cell signal transduction and biology may improve brain tumor patient survival. We now demonstrate that populations enriched for cancer stem cells are preferentially sensitive to an inhibitor of Akt, a prominent cell survival and invasion signaling node. Treatment with an Akt inhibitor more potently reduced the numbers of viable brain cancer stem cells relative to matched nonstem cancer cells associated with a preferential induction of apoptosis and a suppression of neurosphere formation. Akt inhibition also reduced the motility and invasiveness of all tumor cells but had a greater impact on cancer stem cell behaviors. Furthermore, inhibition of Akt activity in cancer stem cells increased the survival of immunocompromised mice bearing human glioma xenografts in vivo. Together, these results suggest that Akt inhibitors may function as effective anticancer stem cell therapies. Disclosure of potential conflicts of interest is found at the end of this article.Keywords
This publication has 37 references indexed in Scilit:
- Glioma Formation, Cancer Stem Cells, and Akt SignalingStem Cell Reviews, 2008
- Mechanisms of Disease: the PI3K–Akt–PTEN signaling node—an intercept point for the control of angiogenesis in brain tumorsNature Clinical Practice Neurology, 2007
- Colon Cancer Stem Cells Dictate Tumor Growth and Resist Cell Death by Production of Interleukin-4Cell Stem Cell, 2007
- CD133+ HCC cancer stem cells confer chemoresistance by preferential expression of the Akt/PKB survival pathwayOncogene, 2007
- Cancerous stem cells can arise from pediatric brain tumorsProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2003
- Identification of a cancer stem cell in human brain tumors.2003
- Ink4a-Arf loss cooperates with KRas activation in astrocytes and neural progenitors to generate glioblastomas of various morphologies depending on activated Akt.2002
- Negative Regulation of Neural Stem/Progenitor Cell Proliferation by the Pten Tumor Suppressor Gene in VivoScience, 2001
- Akt pathway activation converts anaplastic astrocytoma to glioblastoma multiforme in a human astrocyte model of glioma.2001
- Combined activation of Ras and Akt in neural progenitors induces glioblastoma formation in miceNature Genetics, 2000