Defining the therapeutic selective dependencies for distinct subtypes of PI3K pathway-altered prostate cancers

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Abstract

Previous studies have suggested that PTEN loss is associated with p110β signaling dependency, leading to the clinical development of p110β-selective inhibitors. Here we use a panel pre-clinical models to reveal that PI3K isoform dependency is not governed by loss of PTEN and is impacted by feedback inhibition and concurrent PIK3CA/PIK3CB alterations. Furthermore, while pan-PI3K inhibition in PTEN-deficient tumors is efficacious, upregulation of Insulin Like Growth Factor 1 Receptor (IGF1R) promotes resistance. Importantly, we show that this resistance can be overcome through targeting AKT and we find that AKT inhibitors are superior to pan-PI3K inhibition in the context of PTEN loss. However, in the presence of wild-type PTEN and PIK3CA-activating mutations, p110α-dependent signaling is dominant and selectively inhibiting p110α is therapeutically superior to AKT inhibition. These discoveries reveal a more nuanced understanding of PI3K isoform dependency and unveil novel strategies to selectively target PI3K signaling nodes in a context-specific manner.

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Mao, N., Zhang, Z., Lee, Y. S., Choi, D., Rivera, A. A., Li, D., … Carver, B. S. (2021). Defining the therapeutic selective dependencies for distinct subtypes of PI3K pathway-altered prostate cancers. Nature Communications, 12(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-021-25341-9

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