Scientific Reports (Sep 2020)

Co-targeting PIM and PI3K/mTOR using multikinase inhibitor AUM302 and a combination of AZD-1208 and BEZ235 in prostate cancer

  • Sabina Luszczak,
  • Benjamin S. Simpson,
  • Urszula Stopka-Farooqui,
  • Vignesh Krishna Sathyadevan,
  • Lina M. Carmona Echeverria,
  • Christopher Kumar,
  • Helena Costa,
  • Aiman Haider,
  • Alex Freeman,
  • Charles Jameson,
  • Marzena Ratynska,
  • Imen Ben-Salha,
  • Ashwin Sridhar,
  • Greg Shaw,
  • John D. Kelly,
  • Hayley Pye,
  • Kathy A. Gately,
  • Hayley C. Whitaker,
  • Susan Heavey

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-020-71263-9
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 1
pp. 1 – 12

Abstract

Read online

Abstract PIM and PI3K/mTOR pathways are often dysregulated in prostate cancer, and may lead to decreased survival, increased metastasis and invasion. The pathways are heavily interconnected and act on a variety of common effectors that can lead to the development of resistance to drug inhibitors. Most current treatments exhibit issues with toxicity and resistance. We investigated the novel multikinase PIM/PI3K/mTOR inhibitor, AUM302, versus a combination of the PIM inhibitor, AZD-1208, and the PI3K/mTOR inhibitor BEZ235 (Dactolisib) to determine their impact on mRNA and phosphoprotein expression, as well as their functional efficacy. We have determined that around 20% of prostate cancer patients overexpress the direct targets of these drugs, and this cohort are more likely to have a high Gleason grade tumour (≥ Gleason 8). A co-targeted inhibition approach offered broader inhibition of genes and phosphoproteins in the PI3K/mTOR pathway, when compared to single kinase inhibition. The preclinical inhibitor AUM302, used at a lower dose, elicited a comparable or superior functional outcome compared with combined AZD-1208 + BEZ235, which have been investigated in clinical trials, and could help to reduce treatment toxicity in future trials. We believe that a co-targeting approach is a viable therapeutic strategy that should be developed further in pre-clinical studies.