Targeting Akt3 Signaling in Malignant Melanoma Using Isoselenocyanates
Purpose: Melanoma is the most invasive and deadly form of skin cancer. Few agents are available for treating advanced disease to enable long-term patient survival, which is driving the search for new compounds inhibiting deregulated pathways causing melanoma. Akt3 is an important target in melanomas...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Clinical cancer research 2009-03, Vol.15 (5), p.1674-1685 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Purpose: Melanoma is the most invasive and deadly form of skin cancer. Few agents are available for treating advanced disease to enable
long-term patient survival, which is driving the search for new compounds inhibiting deregulated pathways causing melanoma.
Akt3 is an important target in melanomas because its activity is increased in â¼70% of tumors, decreasing apoptosis in order
to promote tumorigenesis.
Experimental Design: Because naturally occurring products can be effective anticancer agents, a library was screened to identify Akt3 pathway
inhibitors. Isothiocyanates were identified as candidates, but low potency requiring high concentrations for therapeutic efficacy
made them unsuitable. Therefore, more potent analogs called isoselenocyanates were created using the isothiocyanate backbone
but increasing the alkyl chain length and replacing sulfur with selenium. Efficacy was measured on cultured cells and tumors
by quantifying proliferation, apoptosis, toxicity, and Akt3 pathway inhibition.
Results: Isoselenocyanates significantly decreased Akt3 signaling in cultured melanoma cells and tumors. Compounds having 4 to 6 carbon
alkyl side chains with selenium substituted for sulfur, called ISC-4 and ISC-6, respectively, decreased tumor development
by â¼60% compared with the corresponding isothiocyanates, which had no effect. No changes in animal body weight or in blood
parameters indicative of liver-, kidney-, or cardiac-related toxicity were observed with isoselenocyanates. Mechanistically,
isoselenocyanates ISC-4 and ISC-6 decreased melanoma tumorigenesis by causing an â¼3-fold increase in apoptosis.
Conclusions: Synthetic isoselenocyanates are therapeutically effective for inhibiting melanoma tumor development by targeting Akt3 signaling
to increase apoptosis in melanoma cells with negligible associated systemic toxicity. |
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ISSN: | 1078-0432 1557-3265 |
DOI: | 10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-08-2214 |