Cancer Letters
Volume 225, Issue 1 , Pages 53-59, 8 July 2005

Upregulated Akt signaling adjacent to gastric cancers: implications for screening and chemoprevention

  • Kok Long Ang

      Affiliations

    • Laboratory of Tumor Phosphoproteomics, National Cancer Centre, Singapore
  • ,
  • Diong Lang Shi

      Affiliations

    • Laboratory of Tumor Phosphoproteomics, National Cancer Centre, Singapore
  • ,
  • Wong Wai Keong

      Affiliations

    • Department of General Surgery, Singapore General Hospital, Singapore
  • ,
  • Richard J. Epstein

      Affiliations

    • Laboratory of Tumor Phosphoproteomics, National Cancer Centre, Singapore
    • Department of Medicine, University of Hong Kong, Queen Mary Hospital, Room 404, Professorial Block, Pokfulam Road, Pokfulam, Hong Kong, People's Republic of China
    • Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author. Address: Department of Medicine, Queen Mary Hospital, University of Hong Kong, Room 404, Professorial Block, Pokfulam Road, Pokfulam, Hong Kong, People's Republic of China. Tel.: +852 2855 3994; fax: +852 2816 2863.

Received 11 October 2004; received in revised form 9 November 2004; accepted 11 November 2004.

Abstract 

Most gastric adenocarcinomas arise as a longterm complication of Helicobacter pylori infection of the stomach, but the high prevalence of this infection limits the cost-effectiveness of antibiotic eradication as a cancer prevention strategy. Here we have used phosphorylation-specific antibodies against the Akt kinase consensus sequence to detect downstream substrates of this oncogenic signaling pathway in normal and malignant gastric tissues. In vitro studies confirm that phosphorylation of Akt and its substrates is inducible by epithelial mitogens such as epidermal growth factor (EGF), which is implicated in the pathogenesis of H. pylori gastritis. Control clinical studies confirm far stronger Akt substrate phosphorylation in primary human breast cancers than in matched adjacent normal breast tissues; unexpectedly, however, increased Akt signaling is apparent in both primary stomach cancers and adjacent normal gastric tissues. These findings raise the possibility of a preneoplastic field defect induced in morphologically normal tissues, and suggest that immunoassays of mucosal Akt activity could guide preventive surveillance and/or intervention in patients at risk of gastric cancer. Moreover, since recent reports confirm Akt inhibition by COX-2 inhibitors, these data support the chemopreventive efficacy of such drugs for at-risk individuals.

Keywords: Carcinogenesis, Preneoplasia, Chronic inflammation

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PII: S0304-3835(04)00882-1

doi:10.1016/j.canlet.2004.11.021

Cancer Letters
Volume 225, Issue 1 , Pages 53-59, 8 July 2005