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Publication : Activation of Akt signaling in prostate induces a TGFβ-mediated restraint on cancer progression and metastasis.

First Author  Bjerke GA Year  2014
Journal  Oncogene Volume  33
Issue  28 Pages  3660-7
PubMed ID  23995785 Mgi Jnum  J:256658
Mgi Id  MGI:6116781 Doi  10.1038/onc.2013.342
Citation  Bjerke GA, et al. (2014) Activation of Akt signaling in prostate induces a TGFbeta-mediated restraint on cancer progression and metastasis. Oncogene 33(28):3660-7
abstractText  Mutations in the PTEN tumor suppressor gene are found in a high proportion of human prostate cancers, and in mice, Pten deletion induces high-grade prostate intraepithelial neoplasia (HGPIN). However, progression from HGPIN to invasive cancer occurs slowly, suggesting that tumorigenesis is subject to restraint. We show that Pten deletion, or constitutive activation of the downstream kinase AKT, activates the transforming growth factor (TGF)beta pathway in prostate epithelial cells. TGFbeta signaling is known to have a tumor suppressive role in many cancer types, and reduced expression of TGFbeta receptors correlates with advanced human prostate cancer. We demonstrate that in combination either with loss of Pten or expression of constitutively active AKT1, inactivation of TGFbeta signaling by deletion of the TGFbeta type II receptor gene relieves a restraint on tumorigenesis. This results in rapid progession to lethal prostate cancer, including metastasis to lymph node and lung. In prostate epithelium, inactivation of TGFbeta signaling alone is insufficient to initiate tumorigenesis, but greatly accelerates cancer progression. The activation of TGFbeta signaling by Pten loss or AKT activation suggests that the same signaling events that have key roles in tumor initiation also induce the activity of a pathway that restrains disease progression.
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