In vitro and in vivo antitumor effects of the dual insulin-like growth factor-I/insulin receptor inhibitor, BMS-554417.
Haluska. Paul P; Carboni. Joan M JM; Loegering. David A DA; Lee. Francis Y FY; Wittman. Mark M; Saulnier. Mark G MG; Frennesson. David B DB; Kalli. Kimberly R KR; Conover. Cheryl A CA; Attar. Ricardo M RM; Kaufmann. Scott H SH; Gottardis. Marco M; Erlichman. Charles C
Key Findings
- BMS‑554417 inhibits IGF‑IR and insulin receptor kinase activity in vitro
- The compound reduces proliferation of several cancer cell lines and causes G0‑G1 arrest and apoptosis
- Oral dosing in mice shrank IGF‑1R‑driven tumor xenografts
Practical Outcomes
- The findings are not directly useful for biohackers looking to boost IGF‑1 LR3 benefits; they simply show that blocking IGF‑1 signaling can fight cancer, which may be of interest for safety considerations but offers no actionable protocol for performance enhancement.
Summary
This study tested a drug that blocks the IGF‑1 and insulin receptors and found it can slow cancer cell growth and shrink tumors in mice, but it doesn’t tell you how to use IGF‑1 LR3 for performance or health.
Abstract
The insulin-like growth factor receptor (IGF-IR) and insulin receptor are either overactivated and/or overexpressed in a wide range of tumor types and contribute to tumorigenicity, proliferation, metastasis, and drug resistance. Here, we show that BMS-554417, a novel small molecule developed as an inhibitor of IGF-IR, inhibits IGF-IR and insulin receptor kinase activity and proliferation in vitro, and reduces tumor xenograft size in vivo. In a series of carcinoma cell lines, the IC50 for proliferation ranged from 120 nmol/L (Colo205) to >8.5 micromol/L (OV202). The addition of stimulatory ligands was unnecessary for the antiproliferative effect in MCF-7 and OV202 cells. BMS-554417 treatment inhibited IGF-IR and insulin receptor signaling through extracellular signal-related kinase as well as the phosphoinositide 3-kinase/Akt pathway, as evidenced by decreased Akt phosphorylation at Ser473. At doses that inhibited proliferation, the compound also caused a G0-G1 arrest and prevented nuclear accumulation of cyclin D1 in response to LR3 IGF-I. In Jurkat T-cell leukemia cells, this agent triggered apoptotic cell death via the mitochondrial pathway. BMS-554417 was orally bioavailable and significantly inhibited the growth of IGF1R-Sal tumor xenografts in vivo. BMS-554417 is a member of a novel class of IGF-IR/insulin receptor inhibitors that have potential clinical applications because of their antiproliferative and proapoptotic activity in vitro and in vivo.
Study Information
pubmed
2006
2006-01-01T00:00:00.000Z
10.1158/0008-5472.can-05-1107