Many micro-RNAs (miRNAs), such as miR-106b, miR-93, and miR-200c, could inhibit expression of PTEN in cell lines; and many miRNAs including miR-21, miR-22, miR-18a, and miR-222 are related to the progression and prognosis of gastric cancer.
Moreover, fentanyl could downregulate NF-kappaB and upregulate PTEN, which might be the mechanism of fentanyl inhibiting gastric cancer progression in vitro.
Moreover, research on molecular mechanisms indicated that both miRNA-32-5p and shKLF2 downregulated the expression of PTEN and activated the PI3K/AKT signaling to promote the development of gastric cancer.
Mutations of this gene are common in brain, prostate, endometrial, and gastric cancers but occur rarely in non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC), although the PTEN protein is often lost in lung tumors.
Our data revealed that AKT1 mRNA and protein expression were induced by doxorubicin (a chemotherapeutic agent); the doxorubicin-induced AKT1 expression and activation increased the binding of NF-kappaB on Notch1 DNA promoter and then promoted the Notch1 transcription and expression; enhanced expression of Notch1 further upregulated PTEN expression through CBF-1 binding to PTEN DNA promoter; and inhibition of AKT1 expression and activity sensitized the gastric cancer cell to doxorubicin treatment in cultured gastric cancer cell lines and xenograft nude mice gastric cancer model.
Our findings suggest that circGRAMD1B plays an important role in GC progression by regulating miR-130a-3p-PTEN/p21, which may provide a potential biomarker and therapeutic target for GC.
Our results indicated that PI3KCA mutation is an important determinant of response to AKT inhibition in GC and combination with AZD5363 can overcome innate resistance to Taxotere in a PTEN loss PDGCX model.
Our study suggests that HOXB7 has an oncogenic role in gastric cancer, which might be related to the modulation of Akt/PTEN activity to induce cell migration/invasion and anti-apoptotic effects.
Real-time reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) was used to examine miR-21 and phosphatase and tensin homolog (PTEN) and Sprouty2 expression in GC cell lines.
Taken together, Ezh2 has a central role in regulating diverse aspects of the pathogenesis of GC in part by involving PTEN/Akt signaling, indicating that it could be an independent prognostic factor and potential therapeutic target.
Taken together, our data reveal a novel mechanism that PTEN inhibits the growth and invasion of gastric cancer via the downregulation of FAK expression and suggest that exploiting PTEN/PI3K/NF-κB/FAK axis is a promising approach to treat gastric cancer metastasis.
Taken together, our findings contribute to current understanding of the functions of FBXO11 and suggest a mechanism by which FBXO11 plays an oncogenic role in the development of GC possibly by inhibiting PTEN and subsequently promoting PI3K/AKT pathway activation.
Taken together, our results demonstrate that miR-188-5p promotes GC cell proliferation and migration while suppressing tumor suppressor gene PTEN expression via transcriptional upregulation of oncogene SALL4.
Taken together, our results demonstrated that WWP2 promotes proliferation of GC cells by downregulating PTEN, which may provide new therapeutic targets for GC.
Taken together, these results suggest that PTENP1 functions as a novel tumor suppressor in GC and its suppressive ability may be involved in the modulation of PTEN.