BACKGROUND: AKT has been identified as a major regulator of cell proliferation, tumorigenesis, and apoptosis. In this study, we evaluated changes in the activity of AKT during colorectal cancer (CRC) progression. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We used stage-oriented human CRC tissue microarrays, including 99 invasive carcinomas, 28 tubular adenomas, and 18 samples of normal colonic mucosa. The tissue array slides were stained with a mouse monoclonal antiphospho-AKT antibody using the avidin-biotin complex method. RESULTS: Activation of AKT was detected mostly in the invasive carcinomas. Sixty-three percent of carcinomas demonstrated strong to moderate AKT activity. Seven percent of carcinomas were phospho-AKT (p-AKT) negative, and 30% (30 of 99) were p-AKT weakly positive. Conversely, 78% of normal colonic mucosas were p-AKT negative, and only 4 samples stained weakly for p-AKT. Eighty-two percent of adenomas were weakly positive for p-AKT, 1 was p-AKT negative, and none exhibited strong or moderate p-AKT stain. At a significance level of .05, we found that the distribution of p-AKT stain scores for cancer was shifted to the right of adenoma (P < .0001) and normal (P < .0001) and for adenoma was shifted to the right of normal (P < .0001). AKT activation did not correlate with tumor stage (P = .28), lymph node metastasis (P = .45), lymphatic invasion (P = .46), or distant metastasis (P = .34). CONCLUSION: This study shows increasing activation of AKT during CRC progression. This finding suggests a role of p-AKT in colorectal carcinogenesis and provides a rationale for using p-AKT inhibitor API-2/triciribine, which is currently under clinical investigation for the treatment of CRC.
BACKGROUND:AKT has been identified as a major regulator of cell proliferation, tumorigenesis, and apoptosis. In this study, we evaluated changes in the activity of AKT during colorectal cancer (CRC) progression. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We used stage-oriented human CRC tissue microarrays, including 99 invasive carcinomas, 28 tubular adenomas, and 18 samples of normal colonic mucosa. The tissue array slides were stained with a mouse monoclonal antiphospho-AKT antibody using the avidin-biotin complex method. RESULTS: Activation of AKT was detected mostly in the invasive carcinomas. Sixty-three percent of carcinomas demonstrated strong to moderate AKT activity. Seven percent of carcinomas were phospho-AKT (p-AKT) negative, and 30% (30 of 99) were p-AKT weakly positive. Conversely, 78% of normal colonic mucosas were p-AKT negative, and only 4 samples stained weakly for p-AKT. Eighty-two percent of adenomas were weakly positive for p-AKT, 1 was p-AKT negative, and none exhibited strong or moderate p-AKT stain. At a significance level of .05, we found that the distribution of p-AKT stain scores for cancer was shifted to the right of adenoma (P < .0001) and normal (P < .0001) and for adenoma was shifted to the right of normal (P < .0001). AKT activation did not correlate with tumor stage (P = .28), lymph node metastasis (P = .45), lymphatic invasion (P = .46), or distant metastasis (P = .34). CONCLUSION: This study shows increasing activation of AKT during CRC progression. This finding suggests a role of p-AKT in colorectal carcinogenesis and provides a rationale for using p-AKT inhibitor API-2/triciribine, which is currently under clinical investigation for the treatment of CRC.
Authors: Mikel Garcia-Marcos; Barbara H Jung; Jason Ear; Betty Cabrera; John M Carethers; Pradipta Ghosh Journal: FASEB J Date: 2010-10-25 Impact factor: 5.191
Authors: Rui Wang; Bianca N Islam; Allison Bridges; Sarah K Sharman; Muhan Hu; Yali Hou; Payaningal R Somanath; Laine Venable; Nagendra Singh; Sangmi Kim; Subbaramiah Sridhar; Franz Hofmann; Darren D Browning Journal: Am J Pathol Date: 2016-12-18 Impact factor: 4.307
Authors: Xiu Xiu Jiang; Xiang Wei Fei; Li Zhao; Xiao Lei Ye; Liao Bin Xin; Yang Qu; Kai Hong Xu; Rui Jin Wu; Jun Lin Journal: PLoS One Date: 2015-12-17 Impact factor: 3.240