Abstract

The phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K)/Akt pathway is frequently altered in human malignancies and Akt over-expression and/or activation induces malignant transformation and chemoresistance. However, the role of Akt in the mechanisms of chemoresistance remains elusive. Here we reported that cisplatin treatment of chemosensitive, but not resistant, ovarian cancer cells (OVCAs) markedly increased the cell proportion in sub-G1 phase. Cisplatin however caused a significant accumulation of the resistant cells in S and G2/M phases, which was associated with a rapid and sustained checkpoint kinase 1 (Chk1) activation. In contrast, while cisplatin also elicited a rapid activation of Chk1 in sensitive cells, it markedly decreased total ChK1 and phospho-Chk1 contents over 12 h. Over-expression of dominant negative (DN)-AKT alone increased phospho-Chk1 content, and induced G2/M arrest and apoptosis. However, it inhibited Chk1 activation and G2/M arrest with combination of cisplatin treatment, resulting in p53-independent apoptosis. Furthermore, the responses of the chemoresistant cells to cisplatin were attenuated with forced expression of constitutive active AKT2. Chk1 knock-down also facilitated cisplatin-induced apoptosis in chemoresistant cells. Our studies implicate that, in addition to its cell survival and anti-apoptotic actions, Akt might also play an important role in the regulation of G2-M transition, possibly via up-regulation of Chk1 activity and stability. These data provide strong support for the concept that Akt is important in cell cycle regulation in the control of chemosensitivity in OVCAs and offers an alternate regulatory pathway for the development of rationale therapy for cisplatin-resistant ovarian cancer.

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