| Literature DB >> 34681745 |
Thanakorn Pungsrinont1, Julia Kallenbach1, Aria Baniahmad1.
Abstract
Androgen deprivation therapy (ADT) and androgen receptor (AR)-targeted therapy are the gold standard options for treating prostate cancer (PCa). These are initially effective, as localized and the early stage of metastatic disease are androgen- and castration-sensitive. The tumor strongly relies on systemic/circulating androgens for activating AR signaling to stimulate growth and progression. However, after a certain point, the tumor will eventually develop a resistant stage, where ADT and AR antagonists are no longer effective. Mechanistically, it seems that the tumor becomes more aggressive through adaptive responses, relies more on alternative activated pathways, and is less dependent on AR signaling. This includes hyperactivation of PI3K-AKT-mTOR pathway, which is a central signal that regulates cell pro-survival/anti-apoptotic pathways, thus, compensating the blockade of AR signaling. The PI3K-AKT-mTOR pathway is well-documented for its crosstalk between genomic and non-genomic AR signaling, as well as other signaling cascades. Such a reciprocal feedback loop makes it more complicated to target individual factor/signaling for treating PCa. Here, we highlight the role of PI3K-AKT-mTOR signaling as a resistance mechanism for PCa therapy and illustrate the transition of prostate tumor from AR signaling-dependent to PI3K-AKT-mTOR pathway-dependent. Moreover, therapeutic strategies with inhibitors targeting the PI3K-AKT-mTOR signal used in clinic and ongoing clinical trials are discussed.Entities:
Keywords: AR antagonist resistance; PI3K; PKB/AKT; androgen receptor; castration-resistance; mTOR; prostate cancer
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34681745 PMCID: PMC8538152 DOI: 10.3390/ijms222011088
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1PI3K-AKT-mTOR interplays in genomic and non-genomic AR signaling. AR signaling can be classified into genomic and non-genomic signaling. Genomic AR signaling involves the translocation of activated AR into the nucleus, the binding to ARE of target genes, and the regulation of transcription activity. In contrast, non-genomic AR signaling does not require AR translocation and DNA binding. In general, AR activation is initiated from the binding of androgen to the receptor, which leads to conformational changes and dissociation of AR from chaperones such as HSPs. This is known as androgen- or ligand-dependent genomic signaling (dark green arrows). However, in the absence of androgens, AR can be activated via phosphorylation mediated by multiple cytoplasmic factors including AKT, a key biological processing factor of the PI3K-AKT-mTOR pathway. Thus, it is considered as ligand-independent genomic AR signaling (light green arrows). In turn, as non-genomic AR signaling (red arrows), the activation of AR can activate the PI3K-AKT-mTOR pathway by interacting with PI3K and AKT. Activation of PI3K-AKT triggers downstream effectors, including mTOR and other signaling cascades, leading to the promotion of growth, proliferation, survival, metabolism, migration, etc. AKT, protein kinase B; AR, androgen receptor; ARE, androgen response element; EIF4E, eukaryotic translation initiation factor 4E; GPCR, G-protein-coupled receptor; HSPs, heat shock proteins; mTORC1/2, mammalian target of Rapamycin complex 1/2; P, phosphorylation; PDK1, phosphoinositide-dependent kinase 1; PI3K, phosphatidylinositol-3-kinase; PIP2, phosphatidylinositol-4,5-biphosphate; PIP3, phosphatidyl-inositol-3,4,5-biphosphate; p70S6K, p70S6 kinase; RTK, receptor tyrosine kinase; S6, ribosomal S6 protein; 4EBP1, 4E binding protein 1.
Figure 2Transition from AR signaling-dependent to PI3K-AKT-mTOR pathway-dependent in PCa. PCa as a localized disease and at the early stage of metastatic disease is androgen- and castration-sensitive. The tumor at these stages strongly relies on systemic/circulating androgens for activating AR signaling to stimulate growth and progression (left panel). This makes it easy to suppress the tumor with therapeutic approaches that target androgen synthesis and AR signaling. However, after a certain period of time, the tumor will eventually develop a resistant stage called castration-resistance (middle panel). At this stage, ADT and the first generation of AR antagonists are not any more effective due to several hypothesized reasons, including intratumoral androgen synthesis, amplification of AR, activation of ligand-independent genomic AR signaling (e.g., via PI3K-AKT-mTOR), etc. These mechanisms suggest that the tumor at this stage still relies on AR signaling, although via adaptive responses, but could still be treated with second generation AR antagonists. Notably, bipolar androgen therapy (BAT) with cycling treatment of ADT and supraphysiological androgen levels seems to be also effective. Again, after a period of time, the tumor will become resistant to AR antagonist (right panel). Presumably, the therapeutic pressure by AR antagonists will selectively lead to the accumulation of PCa cells that no longer express AR or at least express mutated AR/AR splice variants (e.g., ARv7) lacking ligand binding domain. This makes the tumor insensitive to AR antagonists and BAT. Independent of AR, the tumor at this stage fully relies on hyperactivation of multiple cellular signaling cascades such as PI3K-AKT-mTOR and signaling of other nuclear hormone receptors (e.g., GR, PR, and ER). Along with more advance stages of the disease, an aggressiveness of the PCa is enhancing, whereas the survival of the PCa patient is reducing. AKT, protein kinase B; AR, androgen receptor; ARE, androgen response element; ARv7, androgen receptor splice variant 7; ER, estrogen receptor; GPCR, G-protein-coupled receptor; GR, glucocorticoid receptor; HRE, hormone response element; mCSPCa, metastatic castration-sensitive prostate cancer; mCRPCa, metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer; P, phosphorylation; PI3K, phosphatidylinositol-3-kinase; PR, progesterone receptor; RTK, receptor tyrosine kinase.
PI3K-AKT-mTOR pathway inhibitors used in clinical trials.
| Target | Agent | Phase | Regimen | Population | Status | Registry |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pan-PI3K | BKM120 (Buparlisib) | I | +Abiraterone acetate (CYP17A1 inhibitor) | CRPCa progressed on Abiraterone acetate | Completed | NCT01634061 |
| I | +Abiraterone acetate | Docetaxel -pretreated metastatic CRPCa | Terminated | NCT01741753 | ||
| II | Monotherapy | Metastatic CRPCa progressed following ADT and chemotherapy | Terminated | NCT01385293 | ||
| II | Monotherapy | High-risk, localized prostate cancer prior to radical prostatectomy | Terminated | NCT01695473 | ||
| PX866 (Sonolisib) | II | Monotherapy | Metastatic CRPCa progressed following ADT | Completed | NCT01331083 | |
| Dual PI3K/ | BEZ235 | I | +Abiraterone acetate | CRPCa progressed on Abiraterone acetate | Completed | NCT01634061 |
| GDC-0980 | II | +Abiraterone acetate | Docetaxel pre-treated CRPCa | Active, not recruiting | NCT01485861 | |
| LY3023414 | II | +Enzalutamide | Metastatic CRPCa | Completed | NCT02407054 | |
| AKT inhibitors | AZD5363 (capivasertib) | I | Monotherapy | Metastatic CRPCa | Completed | NCT01692262 |
| I | +Enzalutamide or Abiraterone | Metastatic CRPCa | Completed | NCT04087174 | ||
| I/II | +Docetaxel and Prednisolone (glucocorticoid) | Metastatic CRPCa | Active, not recruiting | NCT02121639 | ||
| GSK2141795 (Uprosertib) | I | Monotherapy | Castration-resistant, locally advanced or metastatic with/without PTEN loss | Completed | NCT00920257 | |
| MK2206 | II | +Bicalutamide (anti-androgen) | PCa patients with biochemical relapse and rising PSA after primary therapy | Active, not recruiting | NCT01251861 | |
| I | +Hydroxychloroquine | Stage III PCa | Active, not recruiting | NCT01480154 | ||
| GDC-0068 | II | +Abiraterone acetate | Metastatic or advanced prostate carcinoma | Active, not recruiting | NCT01485861 | |
| Ib | +Atezolizumab and Docetaxel | Metastatic CRPCa | Recruiting | NCT04404140 | ||
| III | +Abiraterone acetate + | Metastatic CRPCa | Active, not recruiting | NCT03072238 | ||
| Perifosine | II | Monotherapy | Metastatic androgen-independent PCa | Completed | NCT00060437 | |
| mTORC1 inhibitors | Everolimus | II | Monotherapy | Metastatic CRPCa | Completed | NCT00629525 |
| I | +Radiation therapy | Biochemical recurrence after radical prostatectomy | Completed | NCT01548807 | ||
| II | +Pasireotide (somatostatin) | Chemotherapy-naive CRPCa | Terminated | NCT01313559 | ||
| I/II | +Docetaxel, Bevacizumab (VEGF inhibitor) | Metastatic CRPCa | Completed | NCT00574769 | ||
| I/II | +Docetaxel | Metastatic CRPCa | Completed | NCT00459186 | ||
| II | +Carboplatin and Predisone | Metastatic CRPCa progressed after Docetaxel | Completed | NCT01051570 | ||
| II | +Bicalutamide | Recurrent or metastatic CRPCa after first-line ADT | Completed | NCT00814788 | ||
| Temsirolimus | I/II | +Bevacizumab | Chemotherapy-treated metastatic CRPCa | Completed | NCT01083368 | |
| II | Monotherapy | Chemotherapy-treated metastatic CRPCa | Terminated | NCT00887640 | ||
| II | Monotherapy | Chemotherapy-naive metastatic CRPCa | Completed | NCT00919035 | ||
| I | +Vorinostat (HDAC inhibitor) | Metastatic CRPCa | Terminated | NCT01174199 | ||
| I/II | +Docetaxel | CRPC receiving first-line docetaxel | Completed | NCT01206036 | ||
| I/II | +Cixutumumab | Metastatic CRPCa | Completed | NCT01026623 | ||
| Dual mTORC1/2 inhibitors | MLN0128 | II | Monotherapy | Metastatic CRPCa | Completed | NCT02091531 |
| AZD2014 | I | Monotherapy | High-risk PCa before radical prostatectomy | Completed | NCT02064608 | |
| I | Monotherapy/+ Abiraterone acetate | CRPCa | Completed | NCT01884285 |
+ indicates co-treatment of agent and indicated regimen. ADT, androgen deprivation therapy; CRPCa, castration-resistance prostate cancer; PCa, prostate cancer.