| Literature DB >> 25929188 |
Haixiang Yu1, Trevor Littlewood2, Martin Bennett3.
Abstract
The mammalian serine/threonine Akt kinases comprise three closely related isoforms: Akt1, Akt2 and Akt3. Akt activation has been implicated in both normal and disease processes, including in development and metabolism, as well as cancer and cardiovascular disease. Although Akt signalling has been identified as a promising therapeutic target in cancer, its role in cardiovascular disease is less clear. Importantly, accumulating evidence suggests that the three Akt isoforms exhibit distinct tissue expression profiles, localise to different subcellular compartments, and have unique modes of activation. Consistent with in vitro findings, genetic studies in mice show distinct effects of individual Akt isoforms on the pathophysiology of cardiovascular disease. This review summarises recent studies of individual Akt isoforms in atherosclerosis, vascular remodelling and aneurysm formation, to provide a comprehensive overview of Akt function in vascular disease.Entities:
Keywords: Akt; Aneurysm; Atherosclerosis; Vascular diseases
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25929188 PMCID: PMC4728195 DOI: 10.1016/j.vph.2015.03.003
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vascul Pharmacol ISSN: 1537-1891 Impact factor: 5.773
Fig. 1Akt-mediated survival signalling.
IGF1R possesses intrinsic tyrosine kinase activity. Once activated by binding to ligands such as insulin/IGF1 to its extracellular domain, receptor autophosphorylation stimulates recruitment, phosphorylation and activation of the adaptor protein IRS1 and which in turn activates PI3K. PI3K activation leads to phosphorylation of PIP2 to PIP3. Plasma membrane-anchored PIP3 and PIP2 attract and bind to the PH domains of Akt and PDK1. Inactive Akt is stimulated via direct binding and phosphorylation of T308 in the central catalytic domain by PDK1 and subsequent phosphorylation of S473 in the C-terminal regulatory domain by mTORC2. Fully activated Akt disassociates from the membrane and further phosphorylates multiple downstream effectors to promote cell survival, either through phosphorylation to activate pro-survival signalling pathways such as NF-kB or to inactivate pro-apoptotic targets such as Bad, Caspase 9, FOXOs and GSK3.
Studies and effects of Akt isoforms in atherosclerosis in mice.
| Targeted Akt isoform | Phenotype/morphology | Mechanism | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Akt1 Tg | SM22αAkt1ER/ApoE−/− | ↓ atherosclerosis, | VSMC survival | |
| Genetic depletion | Akt1−/−/ApoE−/− | ↑ atherosclerosis, ↑ coronary lesions | Inflammation, EC and macrophage apoptosis | |
| Akt2−/−/LDLR−/− | ↑ insulin resistance, | VSMC survival, collagen homeostasis | ||
| Akt2−/−/LDLR−/− | No effect | – | ||
| Akt3−/−/ApoE−/− | ↑ atherosclerosis, ↑ foam cells | Foam cell formation | ||
| BMT | Akt1−/− → ApoE−/− | No effect | – | |
| Akt1−/− → LDLR−/− | No effect | – | ||
| Akt2−/− → LDLR−/− | ↓ atherosclerosis | Macrophage migration and polarisation | ||
| Akt3−/− → ApoE−/− | ↑ atherosclerosis, ↑ foam cells | Foam cell formation |
Fig. 2Akt isoforms in EC, VSMC and macrophage function in atherosclerosis.
ECs and VSMCs predominantly express Akt1. In ECs, Akt1 activates eNOS and NF-κB to promote cell survival. In VSMCs, Akt1 phosphorylates FOXO3a and GSK3 to inhibit apoptosis. Akt1 plays a protective role in EC and VSMC survival to inhibit atherosclerosis. In macrophages, Akt2 but not Akt1 potently induces inflammation, the M1 phenotype, foam cell formation and CCR2-mediated migration, aggravating atherosclerosis. As a minor isoform in macrophages, Akt3 inhibits macrophage foam cell formation and is found to be anti-atherogenic.