| Literature DB >> 32453400 |
Glorianne Lazaro1, Eleftherios Kostaras1, Igor Vivanco1.
Abstract
Aberrant activation of the PI3K pathway is one of the commonest oncogenic events in human cancer. AKT is a key mediator of PI3K oncogenic function, and thus has been intensely pursued as a therapeutic target. Multiple AKT inhibitors, broadly classified as either ATP-competitive or allosteric, are currently in various stages of clinical development. Herein, we review the evidence for AKT dependence in human tumours and focus on its therapeutic targeting by the two drug classes. We highlight the future prospects for the development and implementation of more effective context-specific AKT inhibitors aided by our increasing knowledge of both its regulation and some previously unrecognised non-canonical functions.Entities:
Keywords: AKT; ATP-competitive; allosteric; cancer; inhibitors
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32453400 PMCID: PMC7329346 DOI: 10.1042/BST20190777
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biochem Soc Trans ISSN: 0300-5127 Impact factor: 5.407
AKT inhibitors in the clinic
| Drug | Company | Class | Target | Clinical development (monotherapy) | Clinical development (combination) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AZD5363 | Astra Zeneca | ATP-competitive | AKT1/2/3, P70S6K/PKA | ||
| Ipatasertib/GDC-0068 | Roche | ATP-competitive | AKT1/2/3 | ||
| GSK690693 | Glaxosmithkline | ATP-competitive | AKT1/2/3, PKA, PrkX, PKC | None | |
| GSK2141795 | Glaxosmithkline | ATP-competitive | AKT1/2/3 | ||
| GSK2110183 | Glaxosmithkline | ATP-competitive | AKT1/2/3 | ||
| LY2780301 | Lilly | ATP-competitive | AKT1/2/3 | ||
| MK-2206 | Merck | Allosteric | AKT1/2 | ||
| ARQ 092 | Arqule/Merck | Allosteric | AKT1/2/3 | ||
| ARQ 751 | Arqule/Merck | Allosteric | PanAKT | ||
| BAY1125976 | Bayer | Allosteric | AKT1/2 | None |
Development status: Active (A) — the study is ongoing, and participants are receiving an intervention or being examined, Completed (C) — the study has ended normally, and participants are no longer being examined, Suspended (S) — the study temporarily stopped for assessment, Terminated (T) — the study has stopped early and will not start again, Unknown (U) — status not known. Other: mCRPC, metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer; TNBC, triple negative breast cancer; mBC, metastatic breast cancer; NSCLC, non-small cell lung cancer; CLL, chronic lymphocytic leukaemia; AML, acute myeloid leukaemia.
Figure 1.Activation and inhibition of AKT.
(A) PtdIns(3,4,5)P3 (PIP3) is maintained at the cell surface by the opposing function of several class I PI3K kinases and the PTEN phosphatase. AKT remains inactive in the cytoplasm in a PH-in conformation facilitated by interactions of the PH and the kinase domains. Membrane anchored AKT acquires a PH-out conformation, becomes phosphorylated at specific residues by specific kinases and subsequently propagates the signal by phosphorylating different effectors such as PRAS40, GSK3b, FOXO and more. AKT activation increases protein and lipid synthesis, whereas inhibits autophagy and cell apoptosis. (B) Differential mechanism of action of allosteric and ATP-competitive inhibitors of AKT. Allosteric inhibitors lock the PH-in conformation and suppress its membrane localisation and activation, whereas ATP-competitive inhibitors bind to the ATP-pocket of the kinase domain, stabilise the PH-out conformation where AKT becomes phosphorylated and increase its membrane localisation.