| Literature DB >> 18813315 |
M A Davies1, K Stemke-Hale, C Tellez, T L Calderone, W Deng, V G Prieto, A J F Lazar, J E Gershenwald, G B Mills.
Abstract
Recently, a rare activating mutation of AKT1 (E17K) has been reported in breast, ovarian, and colorectal cancers. However, analogous activating mutations in AKT2 or AKT3 have not been identified in any cancer lineage. To determine the prevalence of AKT E17K mutations in melanoma, the most aggressive form of skin cancer, we analysed 137 human melanoma specimens and 65 human melanoma cell lines for the previously described activating mutation of AKT1, and for analogous mutations in AKT2 and AKT3. We identified a single AKT1 E17K mutation. Remarkably, a previously unidentified AKT3 E17K mutation was detected in two melanomas (from one patient) as well as two cell lines. The AKT3 E17K mutation results in activation of AKT when expressed in human melanoma cells. This represents the first report of AKT mutations in melanoma, and the initial identification of an AKT3 mutation in any human cancer lineage. We have also identified the first known human cell lines with naturally occurring AKT E17K mutations.Entities:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 18813315 PMCID: PMC2570525 DOI: 10.1038/sj.bjc.6604637
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Cancer ISSN: 0007-0920 Impact factor: 7.640
Figure 1AKT3 E17K mutation in melanoma. (A) Mass spectroscopy-based detection of AKT3 E17K mutation in a human melanoma clinical specimen. Peaks correlating with wild-type AKT3 (‘1’) and mutant AKT3 (‘2’) are indicated. (‘3’=predicted mass of unincorporated primer). Only the wild-type peak was seen in normal tissue from the same patient (Supplementary Figure 1). (B) Confirmatory Sanger sequencing of tumour analysed by mass spectroscopy-based method in (A). The missense substitution resulting in the E17K mutation is indicated with an arrow. (C) Western blotting analysis of A375 human melanoma cells transfected with empty control vector (‘pcDNA3’), HA-tagged wild-type AKT3 (‘HA-AKT3’), and HA-tagged mutant AKT3 (‘HA-AKT3 E17K’). Results shown are for cells growing under normal tissue culture conditions.