PTEN Overexpression Cooperates With Lithium to Reduce the Malignancy and to Increase Cell Death by Apoptosis via PI3K/Akt Suppression in Colorectal Cancer Cells
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Abstract
Lithium is a well-established non-competitive inhibitor of glycogen synthase kinase-3b (GSK-3b), a kinase that is involved in several cellular
processes related to cancer progression. GSK-3b is regulated upstream by PI3K/Akt, which is negatively modulated by PTEN. The role that
lithium plays in cancer is controversial because lithium can activate or inhibit survival signaling pathways depending on the cell type. In this
study, we analyzed the mechanisms by which lithium can modulate events related to colorectal cancer (CRC) progression and evaluated the role
that survival signaling pathways such as PI3K/Akt and PTEN play in this context. We show that the administration of lithium decreased the
proliferative potential of CRC cells in a GSK-3b-independent manner but induced the accumulation of cells in G2/M phase. Furthermore, high
doses of lithium increased apoptosis, which was accompanied by decreased proteins levels of Akt and PTEN. Then, cells that were induced to
overexpress PTEN were treated with lithium; we observed that low doses of lithium strongly increased apoptosis. Additionally, PTEN
overexpression reduced proliferation, but this effect was minor compared with that in cells treated with lithium alone. Furthermore, we
demonstrated that PTEN overexpression and lithium treatment separately reduced cell migration, colony formation, and invasion, and these
effects were enhanced when lithium treatment and PTEN overexpression were combined. In conclusion, our findings indicate that PTEN
overexpression and lithium treatment cooperate to reduce the malignancy of CRC cells and highlight lithium and PTEN as potential candidates
for studies to identify new therapeutic approaches for CRC treatment.