Investigator

Lewis C. Cantley

Professor · Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Cell Biology

LCCLewis C. Cantley
Papers(1)
Multi-node inhibition…
Collaborators(2)
Oliver D. K. MaddocksPetros A. Tyrakis
Institutions(1)
Unknown Institution

Papers

Multi-node inhibition targeting mTORC1, mTORC2 and PI3Kα potently inhibits the PI3K/AKT/mTOR pathway in endometrial and breast cancer models

Abstract Background While PI3K/AKT/mTOR signalling plays a critical role in cancer, targeting this pathway with single node inhibitors has limited efficacy due to several known factors such as pathway feedback reactivation, co-occurring pathway mutations, and systemic glucose dysregulation leading to hyperinsulinemia. While multi-node inhibition approaches have shown promising clinical efficacy, they require further mechanistic characterisation. Methods Using models of endometrial and breast cancer, we evaluated the efficacy of a multi-node PI3K/AKT/mTOR pathway inhibitor approach utilising the dual mTORC1/mTORC2 inhibitor sapanisertib, PI3Kα inhibitor serabelisib and an insulin-supressing diet. Pathway signalling inhibition versus a range of single-node inhibitors was measured via S6, AKT and 4E-BP1 phosphorylation. Results The serabelisib-sapanisertib combination more effectively suppressed PI3K/AKT/mTOR pathway signalling, particularly 4E-BP1, than single-node inhibitors, including alpelisib, capivasertib, inavolisib, everolimus and mutant-specific PI3K inhibitors RLY-2608 and STX-478. Serabelisib plus sapanisertib combined effectively with a range of other therapeutics, such as chemotherapies, hormone targeted therapies and CDK4/6 inhibitors. In xenograft models, sapanisertib, serabelisib plus paclitaxel/insulin supressing diet achieved complete inhibition of tumour growth/tumour regression. Conclusion Multi-node PI3K/AKT/mTOR pathway inhibition with serabelisib, sapanisertib and ISD is highly effective in preclinical models of endometrial and breast cancer, supporting continued clinical development in these and other solid tumours.

726Works
1Papers
2Collaborators
Cell Line, TumorNeoplasmsBreast NeoplasmsLung NeoplasmsTumor MicroenvironmentXenograft Model Antitumor AssaysBrain NeoplasmsDrug Resistance, Neoplasm

Positions

2022–

Professor

Dana-Farber Cancer Institute · Cell Biology

2012–

Director

Weill Cornell Medical College · Sandra and Edward Meyer Cancer Center

2007–

Director

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center · Cancer Center

2003–

Professor

Harvard Medical School · Systems Biology

1992–

Division Chief

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center · Division of Signal Transduction /Dept. of Medicine

1992–

Professor

Harvard Medical School · Cell Biology

1985–

Professor

Tufts University School of Medicine · Physiology

1981–

Associate Professor

Harvard University · Biochemistry and Molecular Biology

1978–

Assistant Professor

Harvard University · Biochemistry and Molecular Biology

Education

1978

Postdoc

Harvard University · Membrane Biochemistry

1975

Ph.D.

Cornell University · Biophysical Chemistry

1971

B.S.

West Virginia Wesleyan College · Chemistry

Links & IDs
0000-0002-1298-7653

Researcher Id: D-1800-2014