| Literature DB >> 26793165 |
Helen Louise Robbins1, Angela Hague2.
Abstract
The phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K)/Akt pathway is a key driver in carcinogenesis. Defects in this pathway in human cancer syndromes such as Cowden's disease and Multiple Endocrine Neoplasia result in tumors of endocrine tissues, highlighting its importance in these cancer types. This review explores the growing evidence from multiple animal and in vitro models and from analysis of human tumors for the involvement of this pathway in the following: thyroid carcinoma subtypes, parathyroid carcinoma, pituitary tumors, adrenocortical carcinoma, phaeochromocytoma, neuroblastoma, and gastroenteropancreatic neuroendocrine tumors. While data are not always consistent, immunohistochemistry performed on human tumor tissue has been used alongside other techniques to demonstrate Akt overactivation. We review active Akt as a potential prognostic marker and the PI3K pathway as a therapeutic target in endocrine neoplasia.Entities:
Keywords: Akt/PKB kinases; adrenocortical carcinoma; gastroenteropancreatic neuroendocrine tumors; neuroblastoma; parathyroid tumors; phaeochromocytoma; pituitary tumors; thyroid tumors
Year: 2016 PMID: 26793165 PMCID: PMC4707207 DOI: 10.3389/fendo.2015.00188
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Endocrinol (Lausanne) ISSN: 1664-2392 Impact factor: 5.555
Figure 1The PI3K/Akt pathway. Akt is recruited to the plasma membrane by phosphatidylinositol (3,4,5) trisphosphate (PIP3) produced from phosphatidylinositol (4, 5) bisphosphate (PIP2) by phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K). PTEN is a phosphatase that promotes the reverse reaction. For activation, Akt is phosphorylated on Thr(308) by phosphoinositide-dependent kinase 1 (PDK1) and on Ser(473) primarily by the mTORC2 complex serving as PDK2. Upon full activation, Akt leaves the membrane and can adopt a nuclear or cytosolic localization. There are over 70 known molecular targets of the Akt kinase and the three targets believed to be the most important in carcinogenesis are shown. By phosphorylation of TSC2, Akt relieves its repressive effects on Rheb, resulting in downstream activation of the mTORC1 complex and enhanced RNA translation. GSK3β is a tumor suppressor, which targets a number of proliferation and survival regulators, including β-catenin and Mcl-1, and elevates activity of TSC2 [reviewed in Ref. (9)]. The family of forkhead transcription factors, FoxO, upregulates genes controlling cell cycle arrest and apoptosis and is inhibited by Akt. Whereas GSK3β and TSC2 can be phosphorylated by p-Akt(Thr308) in cells, phosphorylation at Ser(473) is critical to inactivate FoxO proteins [reviewed in Ref. (8)]. When these are phosphorylated they become transcriptionally inactive and subject to nuclear export. FoxO3A exhibits reduced nuclear expression in the majority of thyroid cancers in association with high levels of p-Akt(Ser473), and relevant FoxO3A downstream target genes have been identified in follicular rat thyroid cells (10) and subsequently in benign (FRTL-5) and malignant human thyrocytes (FTC-133) (11), as the CDKN1B gene encoding cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor, p27KIP1, and BCL2L11, encoding Bim, a pro-apoptotic member of the Bcl-2 family of proteins.
Figure 2Percentage of tumors with mutations affecting MAPK or PI3K/Akt signaling pathways in thyroid cancer histotypes of follicular cell origin. Data obtained from the COSMIC, 2014 (32) database considering the top 20 mutations (accessed 16/12/2015). Numbers of samples: papillary, 19239; follicular, 253; anaplastic, 564; mixed papillary and follicular, 69.
Results of Immunohistochemical staining studies for p-Akt(Ser473) in thyroid tumors.
| Antibody | Specimens | Key results | Author (reference) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 115 PTC on TMA (Korean cohort) | 10 cases showed clear nuclear staining (cytoplasmic p-Akt staining observed in approximately half of the samples was considered to be non-specific) | Shin et al. ( | |
| 66 normal thyroid | p-Akt staining rare in normal thyroid samples (4/66). Nuclear p-Akt in 8/20 FA in areas near vessels or in atypical cells and in FTC regions of capsular and vascular invasion (10/10) | Vasko et al. ( | |
| 38 ATC (samples from Spain and Italy) | p-Akt detected in high proportion of anaplastic thyroid cancers, associated with proliferation. Only focal staining in normal tissue | Garcia-Rostan et al. ( | |
| 100 thyroid tumors (10 FA, 62 PTC, 23 FTC, 5 ATC) (Italy cohort) | Expression more common in carcinomas than benign tumors. Associated with cytoplasmic p27KIP1 localization, but not with tumor differentiation | Motti et al. ( | |
| 8 PTC, 8 HT, 8 HT + PTC, 34 normal (samples from USA) | Hashimoto’s thyroditis and cancer showed increased p-Akt. p-Akt higher in cancer with Hashimoto’s thyroiditis than cancer alone | Larson et al. ( | |
| 536 PTC on TMA (Saudi Arabian cohort) | Paper reports on c-Met. p-Akt staining referred to as data not shown. 55% p-Akt positive; significantly associated with c-Met overexpression | Siraj et al. ( | |
| 27 ATC | 16 (59.3%) p-Akt positive | Liu et al. ( | |
| 25 FTC (samples from USA) | 16 (64%) p-Akt positive | ||
| 26 ATC (samples from USA) | p-Akt detected in 22/26 anaplastic thyroid carcinomas. All had cytoplasmic staining and 17 of them had nuclear. Associated differentiated thyroid carcinoma, where present, exhibited only cytoplasmic p-Akt | Santarpia et al. ( | |
| 463 PTC on TMA (Saudi Arabian cohort) | 255/463 overexpressed p-Akt | Uddin et al. ( | |
| Fatty acid synthase expression significantly associated with p-Akt expression | |||
| 196 benign and malignant tumors (65 FA, 68 FTC, 63 PTC) | Strong p-Akt staining intensity in 65% of FTC and in 70% of PTC. Very faint and present in <13% of FA and <5% of normal thyroid. Positive correlation with cytoplasmic FoxO3A staining. | Karger et al. ( | |
| 10 normal (samples from Germany) | |||
| 2 ATC versus 23 normal thyroid (USA samples) | Stronger cytoplasmic p-Akt in tumors compared with nuclear and cytoplasmic staining in normal. Greatly increased nuclear mTOR in the tumors | Liu and Brown ( | |
| 83 PTC (samples from Greece) | Trend for increased expression in tumors with aggressive features. High levels in tumors with | Sozopoulos et al. ( | |
| 35 PTC; 16 with associated lymph node metastasis compared with 19 without (samples from Spain) | No difference in p-Akt staining between tumors with associated metastasis and those without | Zafón et al. | |
| 25 PTC | Staining greater at the invasive front and cells infiltrating vasculature. Associated with connexin 43. | Jensen et al. ( | |
| 10 FTC (samples from Finland) | |||
| 30 PTC (15 classical and 15 histological variants) (USA samples) | Low to moderate staining for p-Akt in all cancers. Enhanced nuclear p-mTOR in aggressive variants | Liu and Brown ( | |
| 536 PTC on TMA (Saudi Arabian cohort) | Of 446 informative TMA results, 242 (54.3%) were classified as high p-Akt and 204 (45.7%) as low (Table 2 in Supplementary Material of the paper); highly significant correlation with mTORC2 activity as measured using mTOR(Ser2482) antibody staining ( | Ahmed et al. ( | |
| 12 ATC (samples from Serbia) | High p-Akt in 5/12 (41.6%), high p-ERK in 7/12 (58.3%), low level PTEN in 6/12 | Milosevic et al. ( | |
| Significant negative correlation between p-Akt staining and | |||
| 42 tumor samples (5 FTC,10 conventional PTC, 8 aggressive PTC, 3 poorly differentiated classified as PTC; 16 MTC) (samples from Greece) | Strong positive association between p-Akt(Ser473) and Sin1 protein expression (all 42 tumors combined) | Moraitis et al. ( | |
| 10 normal thyroid | Overexpression in 57% of PTC, and 30% of FTC. FVTC did not overexpress p-Akt | Pringle et al. ( | |
| 30 PTC | |||
| 5 FVTC | |||
| 10 FTC (samples from Ukraine) | |||
| 1022 PTC on TMA (Saudi Arabian cohort) | Paper focused on XIAP. Highly significant association between XIAP staining and p-Akt staining | Hussain et al. ( | |
| TMA | 38/49 showed positive staining | Rapa et al. ( | |
| 49 MTC (samples from Italy) | Associated with p-mTOR and p-p70S6K, but not with clinical features, pathological features, prognosis, or RET mutation status | ||
| TMA | Expressed in all tumors, but mostly weak. No significant association with patient outcome | Erovic et al. ( | |
| 23 MTC | |||
| Normal thyroid control (USA cohort) | |||
| TMA | C cell-free thyroid tissue negative for both p-Akt(Ser473) and p-Akt(308) | Tamburrino et al. ( | |
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CST, Cell Signaling Technology; mAb, monoclonal antibody; FA, follicular adenoma; PTC, papillary thyroid carcinoma; FTC, follicular thyroid carcinoma; ATC, anaplastic thyroid carcinoma; MTC, medullary thyroid carcinoma; HT, Hashimoto’s thyroditis, FVPC, follicular variant papillary carcinoma; TMA, tissue microarray; LNM, lymph node metastasis.
Results of Immunohistochemical staining studies for p-Akt(Ser473) in non-thyroid tumors of endocrine tissue origin.
| Antibody | Specimens | Key results | Author (reference) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 10 parathyroid carcinoma | On average 87% of tumor cells were positive in adenomas, and 28% of tumor cells were positive in carcinomas | Erovic et al. ( | |
| 25 parathyroid adenoma (Canadian Specimens) | |||
| 40 pituitary adenoma ( | Increased expression compared with normal pituitary. No correlation with p27KIP1 expression | Musat et al. ( | |
| 10 Normal pituitary | |||
| 19 ACTHoma (Japanese Specimens) | Correlation between expression of p-Akt and PC2 | Iino et al. ( | |
| 35 incompletely resected NFPA | Expression associated with recurrence (sensitivity: 69.2%, specificity: 66.7%) | Noh et al. ( | |
| 30 pituitary adenoma ( | p-Akt correlated with c-met and HGF, but not PI3K. Endothelial p-Akt expression associated with tumor size | Trovato et al. ( | |
| 4 adrenocortical carcinoma | p-Akt detectable in normal adrenal cortex. Focal expression of p-Akt in adrenocortical carcinoma | Fassnacht et al. ( | |
| 2 normal adrenal (from renal cancer surgery) (German Specimens) | |||
| 24 adrenocortical carcinoma | Adrenocortical carcinoma showed increased expression of p-Akt compared with adenomas or normal tissue, along with increased p-IGF1R | Barlaskar et al. ( | |
| 2 adrenocortical adenoma | |||
| 4 normal | |||
| 121 adrenocortical carcinoma | p-Akt expression not detected in normal adrenal or adrenocortical adenoma, but detected in 33% of adrenocortical carcinoma. Low SGK1 with strong p-Akt associated with poor prognosis. No correlation between p-Akt and nuclear β-catenin staining | Ronchi et al. ( | |
| 15 adrenocortical adenoma | |||
| 5 normal adrenal | |||
| 47 adrenocortical carcinoma (Dutch Specimens) | p-Akt expression associated with better prognosis after mitotane monotherapy | Hermsen et al. ( | |
| 4 adrenocortical carcinoma | p-Akt detectable in normal adrenal cortex. Focal expression of p-Akt in adrenocortical carcinoma | Fassnacht et al. ( | |
| 2 normal adrenal (from renal cancer surgery) (German Specimens) | |||
| 24 neuroblastoma | No significant difference between differentiated and undifferentiated tumors | Qiao et al. ( | |
| 116 neuroblastoma (German Specimens) | p-Akt(Ser473) and/or p-Akt(Thr308) expression in majority of tumors. High expression correlated with | Opel et al. ( | |
| 30 neuroblastoma | Cytoplasmic p-Akt expression neuroblastoma. Negative staining in normal medulla | Johnsen et al. ( | |
| 55 mass screening neuroblastoma, 21 paired metastasis (Japan, Canada) | Expression lower in neuroblastoma from mass screening, and lower in younger patients. Expression correlates with PARP-1 | Sartelet et al. ( | |
| 55 matched unscreened neuroblastoma, 21 paired metastasis (France) | |||
| 101 primary neuroblastoma, 39 metastasis (French specimens) | Expression in majority of tumors, and expression correlation with PI3K, Akt, VEGFR1, VEGF, TRKB and IGF1R. Not associated with survival | Sartelet et al. ( | |
| 280 primary neuroblastoma, 97 metastasis (French and Canadian specimens) | Expression in almost all tumors. Expression higher in CD133+ tumors | Sartelet et al. ( | |
| 8 phaeochromocytoma | Increased expression compared to normal adrenal medulla | Fassnacht et al. ( | |
| 2 normal adrenal (from renal cancer surgery) (German Specimens) | |||
| 39 primary and 8 metastatic pheochromocytoma | Trend for increased levels in primary tumors versus normal medulla, and in metastasis versus primary tumors | Chaux et al. ( | |
| 19 normal adrenal medulla (American Specimens) | |||
| 85 gastroenteropancreatic NET | Cytoplasmic staining in more than 70% of tumors, vascular endothelium also positive. p-Akt expression correlated with p-EGFR and p-ERK1/2 | Shah et al. ( | |
| 5 paraganglioma | |||
| 4 NET of unknown origin | |||
| 46 gastroenteropancreatic NET (American Specimens) | Diffusely granular cytoplasmic staining in 61% of tumors. No correlation with grade, size or metastasis | Ghayouri et al. ( | |
| 20 gastroenteropancreatic NET (Japanese Specimens) | Cytoplasmic and nuclear p-Akt staining, co-expression with p-mTOR in some tumor cells | Shida et al. ( | |
| 25 neuroendocrine carcinoma (carcinoid any site or pancreatic NET; treated with everolimus and octreotide) | p-Akt(Ser473) immunostaining of archival tumor blocks not associated progression-free survival. High p-Akt(Thr308) from pre-treatment FNA measured using RPPA associated with longer PFS | Meric-Bernstam et al. ( | |
| 195 NET (124 small intestinal, 14 pancreatic, 52 others) | Correlations between members of the mTOR pathway. p-Akt expression correlated with expression of p-PDPK1 and p-mTOR, but was not associated with prognosis | Qian et al. ( | |
CST, Cell Signaling Technology; SC, Santa Cruz Biotechnology Inc.; ILT, Invitrogen Life Technologies; mAb, monoclonal antibody; GHoma, somatotroph adenomas (growth hormone secreting); ACTHoma, corticotroph adenomas (adrenocorticotrophic hormone secreting); TSHoma, thyrotroph adenomas (thyroid-stimulating hormone secreting); FSHoma, follicle-stimulating hormone secreting; NFPA, Non-functioning pituitary adenomas; NET, neuroendocrine tumors; HGF, hepatocyte growth factor; SGK1, serum GC kinase 1; VEGFR1, vascular endothelial growth factor receptor-1; TRKB, neurotrophic tyrosine kinase receptor type B; p-IGF1R, phosphorylated insulin-like growth factor 1 receptor; p-EGFR, phosphorylated epidermal growth factor receptor; p-PDPK1, phosphorylated phosphoinositide-dependent kinase-1; FNA, fine needle aspirates; RPPA, Reverse Phase Protein Array; PFS, progression-free survival.