4.4 Review

Power of PTEN/AKT: Molecular switch between tumor suppressors and oncogenes (Review)

Journal

ONCOLOGY LETTERS
Volume 12, Issue 1, Pages 375-378

Publisher

SPANDIDOS PUBL LTD
DOI: 10.3892/ol.2016.4636

Keywords

PTEN; tumor suppressor; oncogene; molecular switch

Categories

Funding

  1. Kazakhstan-China Collaboration Grant of Diagnosis and Precision Cancer Therapy
  2. Nazarbayev University
  3. Social Policy Grant
  4. SST Professional Development grant
  5. IASANU Proposal grant
  6. ORAU grant

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An increasing amount of evidence has shown that tumor suppressors can become oncogenes, or vice versa, but the mechanism behind this is unclear. Recent findings have suggested that phosphatase and tensin homolog (PTEN) is one of the powerful switches for the conversion between tumor suppressors and oncogenes. PTEN regulates a number of cellular processes, including cell death and proliferation, through the phosphoinositide 3-kinase/protein kinase B/mammalian target of rapamycin (PI3K/AKT/mTOR) pathway. Furthermore, a number of studies have suggested that PTEN deletions may alter various functions of certain tumor suppressor and oncogenic proteins. The aim of the present review was to analyze specific cases driven by PTEN loss/AKT activation, including aberrant signaling pathways and novel drug targets for clinical application in personalized medicine. The findings illustrate how PTEN loss and/or AKT activation switches MDM2-dependent p53 downregulation, and induces conversion between oncogene and tumor suppressor in enhancer of zeste homolog 2, BTB domain-containing 7A, alternative reading frame 2, p27 and breast cancer 1, early onset, through multiple mechanisms. This review highlights the genetic basis of complex drug targets and provides insights into the rationale of precision cancer therapy.

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