Zhai Bo, Hu Fengli, Jiang Xian, Xu Jun, Zhao Dali, Liu Bing, Pan Shangha, Dong Xuesong, Tan Gang, Wei Zheng, Qiao Haiquan, Jiang Hongchi, Sun Xueying
Authors' Affiliations: The Hepatosplenic Surgery Center, Department of General Surgery, the First Affiliated Hospital of Harbin Medical University; and Departments of Gastroenterology and General Surgery, the Fourth Affiliated Hospital of Harbin Medical University, Harbin, China.
Authors' Affiliations: The Hepatosplenic Surgery Center, Department of General Surgery, the First Affiliated Hospital of Harbin Medical University; and Departments of Gastroenterology and General Surgery, the Fourth Affiliated Hospital of Harbin Medical University, Harbin, China
Mol Cancer Ther. 2014 Jun;13(6):1589-98. doi: 10.1158/1535-7163.MCT-13-1043. Epub 2014 Apr 4.
Sorafenib is the standard first-line systemic drug for advanced hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), but the acquired resistance to sorafenib results in limited benefits. Activation of Akt is thought to be responsible for mediating the acquired resistance to sorafenib. The present study aims to examine the underlying mechanism and seek potential strategies to reverse this resistance. Two sorafenib-resistant HCC cell lines, which had been established from human HCC HepG2 and Huh7 cells, were refractory to sorafenib-induced growth inhibition and apoptosis in vitro and in vivo. Sustained exposure to sorafenib activated Akt via the feedback loop of mTOR but independent of protein phosphatase 2A in HCC cells. Autophagy participated in the resistance to sorafenib as inhibition of autophagy reduced the sensitivity of sorafenib-resistant HCC cells to sorafenib, whereas activation of autophagy by rapamycin had the opposite effect. However, rapamycin did not show a synergistic effect with sorafenib to inhibit cell proliferation, while it also activated Akt via a feedback mechanism in sorafenib-resistant HCC cells. Inhibition of Akt reversed the acquired resistance to sorafenib by switching autophagy from a cytoprotective role to a death-promoting mechanism in the sorafenib-resistant HCC cells. Akt inhibition by GDC0068 synergized with sorafenib to suppress the growth of sorafenib-resistant HCC tumors that possessed the sorafenib-resistant feature in vivo. The results have provided evidence for clinical investigation of GDC0068, a novel ATP-competitive pan-Akt inhibitor, as the second-line treatment after the failure of sorafenib-medicated molecular targeted therapy for advanced HCC.
索拉非尼是晚期肝细胞癌(HCC)的标准一线全身用药,但对索拉非尼产生的获得性耐药导致其疗效有限。Akt的激活被认为是介导对索拉非尼获得性耐药的原因。本研究旨在探讨其潜在机制并寻找逆转这种耐药性的潜在策略。两种从人HCC HepG2和Huh7细胞建立的索拉非尼耐药HCC细胞系,在体外和体内对索拉非尼诱导的生长抑制和凋亡均具有抗性。在HCC细胞中,持续暴露于索拉非尼通过mTOR的反馈环激活Akt,但与蛋白磷酸酶2A无关。自噬参与了对索拉非尼的耐药,因为抑制自噬会降低索拉非尼耐药HCC细胞对索拉非尼的敏感性,而雷帕霉素激活自噬则产生相反的效果。然而,雷帕霉素与索拉非尼联合使用时并未显示出协同抑制细胞增殖的作用,同时它也通过反馈机制在索拉非尼耐药HCC细胞中激活Akt。抑制Akt可通过将索拉非尼耐药HCC细胞中的自噬从细胞保护作用转变为促死亡机制来逆转对索拉非尼的获得性耐药。GDC0068抑制Akt与索拉非尼协同作用,在体内抑制具有索拉非尼耐药特征的索拉非尼耐药HCC肿瘤的生长。这些结果为新型ATP竞争性泛Akt抑制剂GDC0068作为索拉非尼介导的晚期HCC分子靶向治疗失败后的二线治疗进行临床研究提供了证据。