Abl kinase deficiency promotes AKT pathway activation and prostate cancer progression and metastasis

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Abstract

Abl family kinases function as proto-oncogenes in various leukemias, and pro-tumor functions have been discovered for Abl kinases in solid tumors as well. However, a growing body of evidence indicates that Abl kinases can function to suppress tumor cell proliferation, motility, and in vivo tumor growth in some settings. To investigate the role of Abl kinases in prostate cancer, we generated Abl-deficient cells in a pre-clinical model of spontaneously metastatic, androgen-indifferent prostate cancer. Loss of Abl family kinase expression resulted in a highly aggressive, metastatic phenotype in vivo that was associated with AKT pathway activation, increased growth on 3D collagen matrix, and enhanced cell motility in vitro . Treatment of Abl kinase-expressing cells with the Abl kinase inhibitor imatinib phenocopied the malignant phenotypes observed in Abl-deficient tumor cells. In addition, inhibiting AKT pathway signaling abolished the increased 3D growth of Abl-deficient cells. Our data reveal that Abl family kinases can function as suppressors of prostate cancer progression and metastasis by restraining AKT signaling, a signaling pathway known to be associated with emergence of metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer.

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europepmc
last seen: 2026-05-19T01:45:01.086888+00:00