| Literature DB >> 24831963 |
Min Shi1, Xiumin Zhou2, Zubin Zhang1, Man Wang1, Guodong Chen1, Kunkun Han1, Biyin Cao1, Zhaopeng Liu3, Xinliang Mao4.
Abstract
Recent studies demonstrated that targeting the phosphatidylinositide 3-kinase (PI3K)/AKT signaling pathway is a major strategy for the treatment of androgen-independent prostate cancer. In the present study, we developed an analog BENC-511 from a recently reported PI3K inhibitor S14161 by structural optimization. Using PC3 and DU145 as the model cell lines, we found PTEN-deficient PC3 cells were more sensitive than PTEN-expressing DU145 ones in terms of cell proliferation, apoptosis, and caspase-3 activation. These findings were consistent with the inhibition on PI3K/AKT signals. BENC-511 preferably suppressed AKT activation in PC3 over DU145 cells. Notably, PTEN restoration attenuated BENC-511 induced apoptosis. Moreover, BENC-511 displayed great therapeutic efficacy in a PC3-derived prostate cancer model in nude mice. With an oral dosage of 50mg/kg, BENC-511 decreased tumor growth more than 50% in 27 days, which was accompanied with PARP cleavage, but did not show overt toxicity. This study lays a solid rationale for the development of BENC-511 as a drug for the treatment of PTEN-deficient and androgen-independent prostate cancers.Entities:
Keywords: Androgen-independence; BENC-511; PI3K/AKT; PTEN; Prostate cancer
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24831963 DOI: 10.1016/j.toxlet.2014.05.003
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Toxicol Lett ISSN: 0378-4274 Impact factor: 4.372