Notably, reduced expression of miRNA‑21 replicated the effect of celastrol on OVCAR3 cells and inhibited the PI3K/p‑Akt‑NF‑κB signaling pathway in an in vitro model of ovarian carcinoma.
We used six whole-exome-sequenced primary HGSOC/USC cell-lines and three xenografts overexpressing HER2/neu and harboring mutated or wild-type PIK3CA/PIK3R1 genes to evaluate the role of PI3K-mutations as potential mechanism of resistance to afatinib, an FDA-approved pan-c-erb-inhibitor in clinical trials in USC.
Here we identified the molecular mechanism that limits the efficacy of the beta-sparing PI3Ki, Taselisib (GDC0032), in PIK3CA-mutated OC cell lines (IGROV1 and OAW42) that acquired resistance to GDC0032.
We assayed a number of food phytochemicals with reported PI3K inhibitory ability to identify candidates that can influence CDDP treatment outcomes in chemoresistant OVCA cell lines.
The PI3K/AKT/mTOR signaling pathway is considered as a promising therapeutic target in the treatment of ovarian cancer (OC); however, inhibition of this pathway only exhibited moderate clinical efficacy when tested clinically.
Collectively, our data suggested that combined inhibition of PI3K and PARP may be an effective therapeutic strategy for ovarian cancers with PIK3CA mutations and that the accompanied BRCA downregulation following PI3K inhibition could serve as a biomarker for the effective response to PARP inhibition.
Conditional suppression of functional p53 increased p110alpha transcripts, protein levels and PI3K activity in immortalized, non-tumorigenic ovarian surface epithelial (OSE) cells, the precursors of ovarian carcinoma.
Dysregulation of the phosphoinositide 3-kinase/mammalian target of rapamycin (PI3K/mTOR) and RAS/extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) pathways is common in ovarian cancer, providing potential new targets for 2nd line therapy.
PIK3R3, the gene that encodes the PI3K regulatory subunit p55γ, is over-expressed in glioblastoma and ovarian cancers, but its expression in gastric cancer (GC) is not known.
Likewise, the phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3K)/protein kinase B (AKT)/mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) pathway is also a central regulator of the ovarian cancer.